If I were in your shoes, and since I am not, it is hard to say what the best choices would be. I didn't see any one item shown that looks "Concours Correct" by date code and in the alternator, starter and carb, looking correct either.
I read in one of your initial posts that you were just "cleaning things up, not striving for Concours" (as in not planning to do a full restoration). The project is all taken apart right now, so now is a good time to get things "right", if ever there was a good time.
If you haven't yet read through the article on Date Codes (found in the Library section of this forum), now would be a good time to do so. You will have a better line of questions afterwards and quite possibly, you will answer many of your own questions on authenticity for your build date.
Then you can decide just how far towards the "numbers matching" Concours Path you wish to go. I was told very early on that few, very few restored cars ever have all numbers matching or only a few restorers even try to build a fully "Thoroughbred Example" because such details are very difficult to get right after so very many years or replacement of wearable items, like the ones you have shown. (Engine transplants, transmission exchanges, rear end changes were VERY common over the years.)
You have a very nice car to work with. It may be very tough to decide what to do now that the "Concours Bug" has bitten you. That being said...if it were me, I would take notes of what you find that has been changed out, restore most if not all of what you already have, begin the hunt for what you wish to replace and continue down the path towards re-assembling the car and perhaps at a later date, once if or ever if you find enough of the correct parts for your build date, do another "freshen-up" to get those details corrected to your liking.
Doing all of that NOW might become overwhelming. Sourcing some of the parts you need might take years and if nothing else, thousands of dollars more than you wish to spend right now. On the flip-side of that, I have found that once you are not "chasing" parts, they seem to show up miraculously out of nowhere at a reasonable price. In any event, if it were me, I would want the car back together again in at very least, a more presentable quality of workmanship, even if some of the finer details are off a bit. That is only my opinion though. Your opinion (and other's opinions) may vary.