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Confirming Identities in Old Family Photos

By Maureen A. Taylor

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I’m working on a photo mystery that is making my eyes hurt and my brain spin. With any luck I’ll be able to present it here next week.

In the meantime, Milah Goler Pasto contacted me through Facebook to ask about a couple of her family photos. She was hoping for confirmation that the mother and the child in this picture were who she was told they were.

margaretmahoneysullivanedit.jpg

Their dress styles, the wicker chair and the painted backdrop all suggest a date of circa 1900. In that period, women’s sleeves could have a slight fullness at the shoulder and bodices were pouched and full at the waist. Wicker chairs were a popular studio accessory in the 1890s and in the early 20th century. While painted backdrops were common throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, at the turn of the century they often featured household scenes.

So who’s in this lovely picture? Irish immigrant Margaret (Mahoney) Sullivan (born 1873) and her daughter Margaret (born 1892).

John Nathan Sullivan (born 1848), a “free person of color” married Margaret Mahoney and they had two daughters. He was a coachman for Dr. Hubbard of Taunton, Mass., and according to Milah, his obituary said “he was well and favorably known throughout the vicinity.”


Solve your family photo mysteries with these books by Maureen A. Taylor:

  • Fashionable Folks: Bonnets and Hats 1840-1900
  • Preserving Your Family Photographs
  • Fashionable Folks: Hairstyles 1840-1900
  • Finding the Civil War in Your Family Album
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