Explore the Family Name Kone

The meaning of Kone

1. West African (mainly Ivory Coast and Mali, also Burkina Faso and Guinea; Koné): from the name of the Koné clan of the Bambara and the closely related Mandinka peoples, of unexplained etymology. Compare Konneh. 2. Americanized form of German Kohn or Dutch Koen. 3. English and Irish: variant of Cone. Some characteristic forenames: African/Muslim Yaya, Issa, Mamadou, Moussa, Abdoulaye, Karim, Oumar, Siaka, Aliou, Alou, Amadou, Amadu, Aminata, Boubacar, Brahima, Fatoumata, Hassan, Ibrahima, Mohamed, Souleymane.

Dictionary of American Family Names, 2nd edition, © Oxford University Press, 2022.

How common is the last name Kone in the United States?

The surname Kone has seen a substantial increase in popularity over the years, as indicated by data from the Decennial U.S. Census. In 2000, the name was ranked 29,932nd most popular, but jumped to the 19,027th spot in 2010 - a significant change of 36.43%. The number of individuals with this surname also grew considerably during this period, from 740 in 2000 to 1,431 in 2010 – a surge of 93.38%. The proportion of individuals bearing the last name Kone per 100,000 population doubled from 0.27 in 2000 to 0.49 in 2010, marking an 81.48% increase.

20002010Change
Rank#29,932#19,02736.43%
Count7401,43193.38%
Proportion per 100k0.270.4981.48%

Race and Ethnicity of people with the last name Kone

The Decennial U.S. Census data also provides insights into the ethnic identity associated with the surname Kone. In 2000, the largest percentage, 50.27%, identified as Black, increasing to 71.42% in 2010. During the same period, those identifying as White decreased from 40.81% to 22.15%. A small percentage identified as Asian/Pacific Islander (2.97% in 2000, decreasing to 2.03% in 2010) and two or more races (4.73% in 2000, dropping to 1.82% in 2010). The census of 2010 also showed some individuals with the Kone surname identifying as Hispanic (2.17%) and American Indian and Alaskan Native (0.42%), categories not represented in the 2000 data.

20002010Change
Black50.27%71.42%42.07%
White40.81%22.15%-45.72%
Hispanic0%2.17%0%
Asian/Pacific Islander2.97%2.03%-31.65%
Two or More Races4.73%1.82%-61.52%
American Indian and Alaskan Native0%0.42%0%