509

French Gold Mesh Bag

18k yellow gold, the small bag opening to reveal two compartments formed by a divider composed of gold mesh, matching the outside of the bag, the inside of the clasp marked "Lucy Claiborne N.O. La.".
size 4" x 5", handle drop 4", total weight 150.0 grams

Provenance: Lucy Marie Claiborne Coleman (1888-1919), The Claiborne-Humphreys Mansion, Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana, to her sister Marie Louise Claiborne Perrilliat (1877-1957), to her son Howard K. Perrilliat (1904-1975), thence by descent through the family.

Notes: Lucy Marie Claiborne was born on June 17, 1888, the daughter of Judge Charles Ferdinand Claiborne (1848-1938) and his wife Amelie Soniat Dufosat (1855-1917), and great-granddaughter of first Louisiana Governor W.C.C. Claiborne (1775-1817). She made her debut in the winter of 1906, attending dozens of cotillions, such as the December 30 Flower Cotillion given by Mr. & Mrs. Norvin Harris ("Miss Lucy Claiborne [was] queenly as a scarlet poppy") , culminating in her reign as Queen of Atlanteans in the 1907 Carnival" "Miss Claiborne assumed the role she was so well-fitted to fill with extreme grace and loveliness. Her robe was of chantilly lace over a silk chiffon, heavily embroidered in gold and spangles. A deMedici collar, formed of gold and lace spanned the shoulders, and from it fell the long court mantle of cream-tinted satin, richly embossed win gold epaulettes and gold embroideries." She was presented in France that summer, traveling with her mother and maiden aunt and namesake, Lucie Claiborne (1845-1915). Her name appears literally hundreds of times in the society pages in the following years as a popular guest and hostess of social and charitable functions. On January 11, 1916, she married Illinois Central Railroad executive Samuel Carey Coleman (1878-1923), who later held a seat at the New York Cotton Exchange. The marriage was sadly short-lived, however; Lucy Claiborne Coleman died at her home at 1905 Esplanade Avenue on January 19, 1919, a victim of the Spanish Flu epidemic. As she had no children, her estate was divided among her siblings and their children, among them Marie Louise Claiborne Perrilliat (1877-1957), in whose family the present and following lot have descended.

18k yellow gold, the small bag opening to reveal two compartments formed by a divider composed of gold mesh, matching the outside of the bag, the inside of the clasp marked "Lucy Claiborne N.O. La.".
size 4" x 5", handle drop 4", total weight 150.0 grams

  • Provenance: Lucy Marie Claiborne Coleman (1888-1919), The Claiborne-Humphreys Mansion, Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana, to her sister Marie Louise Claiborne Perrilliat (1877-1957), to her son Howard K. Perrilliat (1904-1975), thence by descent through the family.
  • Notes: Lucy Marie Claiborne was born on June 17, 1888, the daughter of Judge Charles Ferdinand Claiborne (1848-1938) and his wife Amelie Soniat Dufosat (1855-1917), and great-granddaughter of first Louisiana Governor W.C.C. Claiborne (1775-1817). She made her debut in the winter of 1906, attending dozens of cotillions, such as the December 30 Flower Cotillion given by Mr. & Mrs. Norvin Harris ("Miss Lucy Claiborne [was] queenly as a scarlet poppy") , culminating in her reign as Queen of Atlanteans in the 1907 Carnival" "Miss Claiborne assumed the role she was so well-fitted to fill with extreme grace and loveliness. Her robe was of chantilly lace over a silk chiffon, heavily embroidered in gold and spangles. A deMedici collar, formed of gold and lace spanned the shoulders, and from it fell the long court mantle of cream-tinted satin, richly embossed win gold epaulettes and gold embroideries." She was presented in France that summer, traveling with her mother and maiden aunt and namesake, Lucie Claiborne (1845-1915). Her name appears literally hundreds of times in the society pages in the following years as a popular guest and hostess of social and charitable functions. On January 11, 1916, she married Illinois Central Railroad executive Samuel Carey Coleman (1878-1923), who later held a seat at the New York Cotton Exchange. The marriage was sadly short-lived, however; Lucy Claiborne Coleman died at her home at 1905 Esplanade Avenue on January 19, 1919, a victim of the Spanish Flu epidemic. As she had no children, her estate was divided among her siblings and their children, among them Marie Louise Claiborne Perrilliat (1877-1957), in whose family the present and following lot have descended.

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July 25, 2021 10:00 AM CDT
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