Mysterious Dodge Pearls to Be Offered by Bonhams New York On 16 December a magnificent three-strand natural pearl necklace, currently owned by the Dodge Auto heirs, is expected to fetch $500,000-700,000.
On 16 December 2008 at Bonhams’ prestigious salerooms on New York City’s Madison Avenue, a magnificent three-strand natural pearl necklace is expected to fetch US$500,000-700,000. Comprising 224 pearls and two Cartier diamond clasps, the necklace is currently owned by descendents of the founder of the US motoring company, Dodge Automobiles.
In 1920, Michigan-born Horace E. Dodge bought the pearls from The House of Cartier for his wife Anna Thomson Dodge in the belief that they had once belonged to Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia.
The Michigan-born Horace Dodge was a self-made billionaire. A gifted mechanic, he moved, in 1886, with his brother John to Detroit and later founded Dodge Automobiles. For a time the Dodge brothers built engines for Henry Ford in a deal that included a share position in the new Ford Motor Company. When the brothers decided to sell their shares to Henry Ford in 1919, each receiving US$12.5 million from the sale, Horace promised to buy his wife Anna any “earthly thing she wanted”. Anna – a Scottish immigrant, born in Dundee - said that she wanted pearls.
Horace agreed and purchased a pearl necklace from Cartier. Anna is thought to have worn the necklace just twice in her lifetime and one of those occasions was for her daughter Delphine’s wedding to H R Cromwell, the son of a prominent Philadelphia banker. The wedding and reception were one of the social events of that year, with 3,000 guests in attendance and the entire Detroit Symphony Orchestra playing throughout the evening- a fitting venue for the necklace to make its debut.
Designed with versatility in mind, the necklace was originally made up of five strands of pearls, which allowed its owner to change the combination and style of the jewelry. Anna gave these pearls to her daughter Delphine, but on her untimely death at the age of 44, the pearls reverted back to Anna. In 1968, Delphine’s daughter Yvonne acquired the pearls from Anna and subsequently divided the strands amongst her friends and heirs. Three of these family members have decided to reunite their individual strands to sell as one necklace at Bonhams’ auction.
Ever since 1920, when Horace Dodge first bought the pearls from Cartier there has been much speculation over the necklace’s early provenance. A Cartier sales invoice to Horace E. Dodge, Esq, dated 24 May 1920, states that the “five row pearl necklace, consisting of three hundred and eighty-nine (389) pearls weighing forty-three hundred and five (4305) grains” was accompanied by an “enamel clasp representing Catherine, Empress of Russia” and “two (2) diamond alternate clasps”. Many newspaper articles written in the early 1920s and since then, including those from The New York Times and Detroit Times, have suggested that the pearls once belonged to Catherine the Great and furthermore, the heirs of Anna Thomson Dodge maintain that Horace bought the pearls from Cartier on that basis.
“I fear the truth will always be shrouded in mystery,” says Bonhams’ International Director of Jewellery Matthew Girling.