Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Daniel Osborn 1692–1757 – Genealogical Records
Birth Date: 1692
Birth Location: East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America
Death Date: MAY 1757
Death Location: South End Cemetery, East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America
Father: Daniel Osborn
Mother: Elizabeth Hand
Spouse(s):
Children(s):
In 1692, Daniel Osborn entered the world in East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America, born to Daniel Osborn And Elizabeth Hand. Daniel Osborn married Elizabeth Austin. Daniel Osborn passed away in 1757 in South End Cemetery, East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America.
Find more search results for Daniel OsbornReliability Score
This score reflects the reliability of the source family tree. A high rating indicates a trustworthy source with strong data consistency.
- A 3 criteria (Strong)
- B 2 criteria (Medium)
- C 1 criteria (Basic)
- N/A 0 criteria (Insufficient)
This tree's reliability score:
- Record available
- Descendant's record available
- Star tree owner
Biography
- In 1692, Daniel Osborn entered the world in East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America, born to Daniel Osborn And Elizabeth Hand.
- Daniel Osborn married Elizabeth Austin.
- Daniel Osborn passed away in 1757 in South End Cemetery, East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America.
Immediate Family
Parents
Spouses(s)
Children(s)
Daniel Osborn's Ancestors
Daniel Osborn's Timeline
3 Records
Sources
Event Type: Birth
Event Date: 1692
Event Place: East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America
Genealogy Event 2
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 17 MAY 1757
Event Place: East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America
Genealogy Event 3
Event Type: Burial
Event Date: MAY 1757
Event Place: South End Cemetery, East Hampton, Suffolk, New York, British Colonial America