Thursday, February 14, 2013

Photo # 14 Young Nellie

Head Shot Nellie Schofield by midgefrazel
Head Shot Nellie Schofield, a photo by midgefrazel on Flickr.

Photo # 4 Young Nellie Schofield



My great grandmother, Nellie's photos are rapidly fading away. I gathered them together and placed them in archival bags. Previously, I scanned the one which is full front faced because it gave me a very good idea what this branch of the family looked like. My Schofield line is so interesting because they came to America and built the first woolen mill. I worked on them with a textile expert and it was great fun. My friend, Brian Zoldak, photographed the gravestones I didn't have in the cemetery in Montville, CT. I can't wait to blog about those gravestones.

Nellie doesn't look like the picture of health in these photos. Not only are they fading, I have extra copies of two of the photos and I don't really know why. One set was obviously my grandmother's copies and I think the second set may have been found when Nellie passed away. She outlived her husband by many, many years.

Because she was a Schofield (which should be spelled Scholfield), her photos were taken in three changes of clothes in the family photography studio in Westerly. Her bangs look different and I am thinking that the one that is full faced was taken after she married because it doesn't have the photographer's imprint at the bottom.

I've scanned the ones that are the least damaged. I think the bar pin that is on the one with the full body pose is the pin (the one I am touching in this photo) that my mother gave me before she died. I missed the opportunity to ask if it belonged to Nellie but I have decided to call it "Nellie's pin". My mother didn't like that they called her grandmother, Nellie, and insisted her name was Ellen. I have no birth record. The first record I found is her marriage to J. Fred Barber. The 1905 RI census gives me her date of birth.

As she aged, her medical problems worsened and by 1935 she looked older than she actually was. You will see that photo in an upcoming post. But, for now, I want you to examine her face carefully. See the dark lines under her eyes?  Allergies, I think. Those dark lines helped me be sure of her father's photograph.

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1 comment:

Mariann Regan said...

Oh yes, I can see the dark lines. Nellie looks much better in profile ... but apparently she was long-lived, which is great. I also am in the process of trying to archive photos before they fade away completely. It seems a slow and painstaking process. I think photographs speak volumes, and we should preserve them as best we can! Thanks for this post.