Up to 12 years. But rarely in captivity
10-12 years
No, hens do not live in a pen. Hens live in what is called a coop. Pigs are the animals that live in a pen.
Grammatical issues, aside, I presume you meant RHODE Island red hens (there's no such thing as LONG Island red hens), which live about five years, the same as any other domesticated chicken.
Hens can live for about 6-ish years if you let it live that long. They only lay for about a year or two so you might want to kill the poor thing around that time.
Yes, turkeys and hens get along quite well together.
Warren hens can possibly live for up to 14 years although most will not survive for quite this long. Like all chickens they will lay most productively in the first year, with a small drop-off in egg numbers for the second year and after year four they are unlikely to produce any real quantity of eggs at all, which is why commercial hens are culled at such a young age.
Intensively farmed chickens live for about a year if they are laying hens. Intensively farmed meat birds live for as little as 39 days.
Eggs from battery hens, i.e. hens that are kept in cages (known as batteries) where several hens live together in one cage. These hens cannot roam freely as free-range hens can.
About as long as any other, depending on the individuals life, enviroments, and stimuli. 9 years is more than likely the maximum.
Pen
They are freshwater fowl.
Domesticated chicken hens live in a coop or pen. They need to forage during the day and have shelter, roosting and nesting areas from dusk to sunrise.