The bird in your very first picture is not a standard bronze. If it were, the tips of the feathers on the lower back and the tip of the tail would be a much lighter buff color, almost white. Also, the secondaries that show the very pretty mottled light brown would show some black and white barring. This hen may be what the seller called wild cross, and it may be a cross between an eastern wild and a bronze, ot it may even be a wild, but it doesn't seem to have the same sheen that wild turkeys do. It may also be a red bronze, although it is common for the nice brown wing area to be paler on red bronzes.
You sat that the other hen has more white in the back feathes and the tail band. That one is quite likely a standard bronze.
The gray one is not a narragansett. For a narragansett, see Courtney R's picture. Your bird is a very solid gray on the body while narragansetts are grey and black. Also, narragansett tails tend to be browner and the secondaries would not be barred, but would look like a pale version of the secondaries of the hen on the first picture. Not sure exactly what it is, though.
You sat that the other hen has more white in the back feathes and the tail band. That one is quite likely a standard bronze.
The gray one is not a narragansett. For a narragansett, see Courtney R's picture. Your bird is a very solid gray on the body while narragansetts are grey and black. Also, narragansett tails tend to be browner and the secondaries would not be barred, but would look like a pale version of the secondaries of the hen on the first picture. Not sure exactly what it is, though.