It is unknown, they were lost after she sold them.
The painting of Juliette Gordon Low and any color illustrations show her with brown eyes.
She was honored on a US postage stamp late forties. There are photos of Juliette Gordon Low on the Girl Scouts of the USA web site and at the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace web site. See Related Links for links to some photos of Juliette Gordon Low.
The web address of the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace is: http://www.juliettegordonlowbirthplace.org/
Information about Juliette's mother, Eleanor Lytle Kinzie Gordon, indicates that she was Episcopalian, so Juliette might perhaps have been Episcopalian. Biographer Stacy A. Cordery states that Juliette Gordon Low was a woman of deep faith and life-long devotion to the Episcopal Church.
Juliette Gordon Low loved to travel, so she traveled to many countries, especially in Europe. She traveled to Scotland and England where Juliette and her husband, William Mackey Low, had homes.
Juliette Gordon Low is said to have received $8,000 for her string of pearls.
Juliette Gordon Low enjoyed doing needlework but there is no record of her selling her needlework. Juliette did sell her pearls in order to help fund the Girl Scout program.
No, Juliette Gordon Low went to several different boarding schools and a finishing school. It was very unusual in the late 1800's for a female to go to college.
Yes, Juliette Gordon Low's father was a soldier and an officer who participated in the US Civil War as a Confederate officer and as a Brigadier General in the Spanish American War.
Juliette Gordon Low probably owned several sets of pearl jewelry during her lifetime. When Girl Scouts needed money, she did sell a pearl necklace, but it is not known for sure what it looked like. One portrait of Juliette shows her wearing a single strand of pearls.
It is most likely that the pearls were white as black pearls are very rare and expensive. Juliette's pearls were so valuable because they were matched: matched pearls means that the pearls "fit together" in a pleasing manner, and that variations among them are either minimal, gradual, or for a specific purpose.
Juliette Gordon Lows' father was William Washington Gordon II. His family were early settlers in Georgia. William was a Confederate Captain in the US Civil War and a brigadier general in the United States Army during the Spanish-American War.Juliette Gordon Low's mother was Eleanor Kinzie Gordon. Her family played a role in founding Chicago, Illinois.
When Juliette Gordon Low needed money to help the national organization get started, she sold her own string of pearls and donated the money to the Girl Scout organization.
Pop corn
She sold a pearl necklace to keep her troop alive. Actually, Juliette Gordon Low sold a pearl necklace, but it was for the Girl Scout movement later on, not her first troop.
Juliette Gordon Low loved animals. Juliette also painted and sculpted.
Juliette's full name was Juliette Magill Kinzie Gordon Low. As a child, however, she was nicknamed "Daisy".Juliette Gordon Low was her real name.