The Tintype Photos
In considering the best way to present these eight images, I chose to present below one by one - with the original photo, and then the original photo colorized for impact. Where I think there are places to present other older images, that might help identify who is in the photo - they will be presented under the photo. However, there are very few photos of the Nash family in the Illinois period.
The one photo of the entire living Nash family in 1883, the year they homesteaded in Dakota Territory, will be posted below the first photo. I have made one observation based on the photos of George Nash. He seems to have aged faster than the aging process we might experience now. The tintype of him is of him, and likely where he’s in the early 30’s. The family photo from 1883 shows him in his late 40’s, but by current standards he looks older than that chronological age. Here are the seven images:
Photo One - Three men. Across the top is written “Great grandpa Nash”. It is unclear who, from what generation, wrote this note. I had never observed the note before, and wish I had gotten on this sooner. There are two options for who “Great grandpa Nash” was. One is that a grandchild of George M. Nash wrote that, and if so, it would be Oliver Nash, George’s father. But he died in Illinois in 1860, and therefore it is unlikely - given the ages of some of the other people in these photos, that this is him.
As stated above, George Nash was born in 1834 in New York, moved to Illinois in the 1840’s with his father Oliver, left for Dakota Territory in 1883 and died in South Dakota in 1908. That would mean this is most likely George M. Nash, during the Illinois period. I have one photo of him from the Epic of the Great Exodus, which is also reproduced in a family photo, and is shown just below. If these photos were taken in the mid-1860’s, George looks older than age thirty in the photo. More questions, than answers. Who are the other two men? In what year was this photo taken? But based on this analysis, the man in the center is almost certainly George Nash.