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Girl Scout Service Unit 303
(Wyoming-Grandville-Jenison-Hudsonville-Allendale, Michigan)
 
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Most of us have heard the story of how Juliette Low sold her pearl necklace( that had been given to her by her husband on their wedding day), but have you ever wondered what happened to them after that?   An older Girl Scout leader found a copy of an American Girl Magazine article that tells us the story of the pearls..... (Attached below is a scan of the entire page 46 from American Girl Magazine with the article)  If you cannot open the link, the article is transcribed here:

   

from American Girl Magazine, March 1970

  A String of Pearls

By Ann Joyce

 Have you ever wondered what happened to the famous pearls that Juliette Gordon Low sold, more than half a century ago, to keep the Girl Scouts going?

 Well,we did.  To honor the Girl Scout Birthday on March 12, we went in search of the story for this issue of American Girl

 The answer, we found, was practically under our noses, Mrs. Meldrin Shonnard, a native of Savannah, Georgia, who was the Girl Scouts’ first national treasurer,lives just a few blocks from Girl Scout National Headquarters in New York.  And it was Mrs. Shonnard’s first husband who bought the pearls for his young wife.

 “In 1913,” Mrs. Shonnard told us, “I married Ted Coy (he was a Yale man, like Daisy Gordon’s father and brothers) and we went to live in Washington, D.C.  That was the year that Daisy Low decided toset up a national office for the Girl Scouts in Washington.  She rented a room in the Munsey Building,which was the newest and finest office building in the city, and brought Edith Johnston from Savannah to be national secretary.”

 “She also announced that I was to be national treasurer – which was very funny,since I can neither add nor subtract.But Daisy knew no fear.  To her, Edith Johnston was the ablest of secretaries and I was the most capable of treasurers.  Actually, it turned out all right because my husband did the treasurer’s work.  He was with the bank that owned the Munsey Building, so it was quite convenient.

 “I held this exalted position for a very short time, as we moved to New York in 1914.  After that, Daisy would often stay with us when she came to New York.  We were half amused and half admiring at the energy she threw into her Girl Scout work.

 “In those early days, her brothers and sister were simply indignant about this project.  Daisy was putting all her life into it, and they – especially her brothers – did not see how it could succeed.  They didn’t want her to be destroyed by failure.

 “When Daisy decided to sell her pearls, my husband bought them.  I think it was twenty-eight hundred dollars he paid.  We were just starting out then,so our friends were startled when they asked what he was buying me for Christmas and he replied, ‘A string of pearls’.

 I used to wear them all the time – to parties and balls and luncheon at the Ritz.  They looked right with everything,any time of day, and I had been told that real pearls should be worn constantly because your skin feeds them.  Years later, sad to say, they were lost and I never got them back.”

 Although Mrs. Low was much older than the Coys, she invited them to visit her at the shooting lodge that she rented in Scotland.Mrs. Shonnard remembers the occasion as one of great gaiety.  “Daisy,” she explained, “was never any age.  Young people loved her; attractive young men, especially, used to flock around.”

 There is no doubt that Juliette Low’s magic with young people was responsible for the successful introduction of Girl Scouting to this country.  For if she had not won girls to the new movement, her impressive social contacts and her genius for getting people to work in Scouting would have been of no use.

 From a handful of girls in 1912 to a membership of almost four million in 1970 –that’s the record of Girl Scout growth.“I visited your national headquarters not long ago,” Mrs. Shonnard recalled.  “That beautiful, big building– wouldn’t Daisy be pleased to know!”

 Then she added, “I’m sure she does know.”

  

 

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Juliettes Pearls, American Girl.pdf Page 46 from American Girl Magazine, March 1970, "A String of Pearls"