Bazsites.com Sextuplets
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Gosselin Sextuplets - Meet the Gosselin sextuplets, born in 2004, and their twin siblings, as well as the parents. News articles, updates, prayer list.
- Dilley Sextuplets - Facts, articles, pictures and information about the Dilley sextuplets.
- Hayes Sextuplets and Twins - The Hayes family has two sets of twins as well as sextuplets born in September 2004, as the 11th set in the USA.
- Two of Bahraini's sextuplets die - [CNN]
- Harris Sextuplets - View photos of Kobe, Kieran, Kyle, Kaleb, Kiera and Kaylynne, along with news articles.
- Mother gives birth to sextuplets - [CNN]
- Portuguese woman gives birth to sextuplets - [CNN]
- Harris Sextuplets - Official site with pictures, family information, donations and helpers.
- Rago, Kansas - Includes brief history of the town. Home of the first sextuplets born in the state. Located in southern Kingman County.
- Freddie Mac gives a house to five babies - [CNN]
Wikipedia Articles
- Hanselman sextuplets - The Hanselman sextuplets were born at Akron Children's Hospital in Akron, Ohio on February 26, 2004, and are the first set of sextuplets to have been born in their state. Their parents, Jennifer and Keith Hanselman, live in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, and had a 2-year-old son at the time that the sextuplets were born.
- Walton sextuplets - The Walton sextuplets were born in Liverpool, United Kingdom on November 18, 1983 and were the world's first all-female surviving sextuplets, and the world's fourth known set of surviving sextuplets. The children are Hannah, Lucy, Ruth, Sarah, Kate and Jenny.
- Dilley sextuplets - The Dilley sextuplets (Brenna Rose, Julian Emerson, Quinn Everett, Claire Diane, Ian Michael and Adrian Reed), of Decatur, Indiana, were the first surviving set of sextuplets in the United States. They were born on May 25, 1993 to Becki and Keith Dilley.
- Rosenkowitz sextuplets - The Rosenkowitz sextuplets were born in Cape Town, South Africa, on January 11, 1974. They were the first known set of sextuplets to survive their infancy.