Single-Strand Pearl Necklace With 14K Gold Clasp Heads to Kaminski Auctions
A 9 mm single-strand pearl necklace with a 14K gold clasp from a Swampscott, MA collection sold at Kaminski Auctions on March 7.

A single-strand pearl necklace with a 14K gold clasp crossed the block at Kaminski Auctions in Beverly, Massachusetts on March 7, offered as part of the house's March Estates Auction, Day 1. The piece, approximately 16 inches in length with pearls measuring roughly 9 mm, came to market carrying provenance from a private Swampscott, Massachusetts collection.
At 9 mm, the pearls sit at a diameter that straddles the line between refined and substantial. Classic strand necklaces in this size range have long served as the backbone of fine jewelry wardrobes: generous enough to read with presence at the neckline, yet well-proportioned for a 16-inch princess-length fit that rests just at the collarbone. The 14K gold clasp, while understated in description, is a detail that collectors note carefully. A well-made clasp in 14K gold speaks to a piece assembled with longevity in mind, and on a strand necklace, it also bears the full weight and tension of daily wear.
Provenance from a Swampscott collection adds a layer of particularity. Estate jewelry from private North Shore Massachusetts collections frequently reflects the restrained, quality-conscious aesthetic of the region's older families, where a strand of pearls was both an heirloom and a practical piece of dress jewelry worn across decades. That kind of continuous ownership history tends to favor preservation.

Kaminski Auctions, based in Beverly, has built a consistent reputation for estate sales drawing from exactly this kind of regional New England provenance. The March Estates Auction, Day 1 offered the necklace alongside other property from similar collections, situating it within a broader context of accumulated domestic fine jewelry rather than the single-owner sales that command higher curatorial attention. For a buyer seeking a wearable strand with honest provenance, that context is less a liability than a clarification of what the piece is: a well-made classic with a traceable past.
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