New Jersey

Former New Jersey First Lady Deborah Kean Dies at 76

The former first lady served alongside her husband, Governor Thomas Kean, from 1982 to 1990

former first lady deborah kean
Kean Family

Former New Jersey First Lady Deborah Kean, who served alongside her husband, Governor Thomas Kean from 1982 to 1990, has died at the age of 76.

The Kean family released a statement announcing her passing on Friday.

"Mrs. Deborah (Debby) Bye Kean, beloved wife of former New Jersey Governor Thomas H. Kean, passed away on the evening of April 23, 2020. She would have turned 77 years of age on May 15. Mrs. Kean died peacefully at home," the statement read.

First Lady Kean was noted for her work renovating the governor's mansion at Drumthwacket.

"Throughout Governor Kean's administration, she remained a strong presence. Ever mindful of the inherent challenges of a sitting governor, First Lady Kern supported her husband and ensured he also focused on his most lasting legacy of personal family," Governor Phil Murphy and First Lady Tammy Murphy said in a joint statement.

The remainder of the Kean Family's statement, posted by her son, New Jersey State Senator Tom Kean, Jr., is as follows:

Debby Kean was born in Wilmington, Delaware in 1943, the only child of the late Elizabeth Griffenberg Bye and Robert Bye, a corporate executive. Mrs. Kean was a graduate of the Tower Hill School in Wilmington and of Bennett College in Millbrook, New York. She married Thomas H. Kean on June 3, 1967.

As first lady, Mrs. Kean was noted for the renovation of the Governor’s mansion at Drumthwacket. When Kean was elected, New Jersey did not have a Governor’s mansion, as their previous site Morven was given to the New Jersey Historical Society to use as their headquarters. The new site, Drumthwacket, was filled with old and tired furniture. Debby knew that New Jersey’s Governor’s mansion should be second-to-none. Therefore Debby formed a foundation, encouraged donations and soon bought wonderful antique furniture which is still admired today. She said New Jersey deserves as good of a Governor’s mansion as any other state, and she made that happen.

When she saw a wrong, she tried to right it. She found that many state employees were struggling because of a lack of day care available for their children. She lobbied various people until she received the funds, and with those funds established a number of day care centers for the children of state employees. The largest still bears her name, The Deborah B. Kean Childcare Center.

Mrs. Kean was known to family and friends for her warm disposition and quick wit. An avid reader, she was a lifetime enthusiast of the performing and visual arts, avocations she shared with her husband.

In addition to her husband, Mrs. Kean is survived by her sons, NJ state Senator Thomas H. Kean, Jr., of Westfield, Reed Kean, of Chatham, a business executive, a daughter, Alexandra Kean Strong, of Duxbury, Massachusetts, an educator; and seven grandchildren.

Above all she loved her children and seven grandchildren and was deeply loved in return.

Copyright NBC New York
Contact Us