Freshwater Pearl Production in the United States

Native Americans of the Atlantic Coastal areas and the Mississippi River Basin were the first to collect and use U.S. freshwater mussel pearls and shells. Pearl pendants and ear pendants were worn by both sexes and both pearl and shell were used for decorative purposes on articles of clothing. Some of the tribes used pearls as tributes; reportedly, Powhattan (Pocahontas' father) had large stores of pearls received as tribute. Additionally, armlets, pendants, and gaming pieces were made from mussel shell.

It is said that the first American pearl was discovered by a cobbler named David Howell in 1857 in New Jersey. Howell collected a number of mussels from the banks of the Notch Brook River near Paterson. He then prepared his favorite mussel dish which came with a most welcome surprise. He bit down on a 26-gram pearl which he later found out would have been worth some $25,000 had it not been damaged by cooking and his teeth marks.

Natural freshwater pearls are rarely perfectly round or even nearly round, more often than not they are baroque, slugs, or wings. (see Freshwater Pearls: The Shapes) Many pearls, both natural and cultured, have beautiful color and luster. Freshwater pearls are noted for their wide range of color, they can be found in white, silvery white, pink, salmon, red, copper, bronze, brown, lavender, purple, green, blue, cream, and yellow.

White is the most common color, the most desirable are the pastel pinks, roses, lavenders, and purples. The different colors are a function of the mussel species, genetics, water quality, and the position of the pearl in the shell. Generally, pearls assume the color of the shell in which they form. Problems can arise in putting together matched strands because of the wide range of pastel colors.

The shape of the nucleus and its position in the mussel determines the shape of the cultured pearl. The shapes recovered include rounds, pears, eggs, drops, buttons, dome, and baroques. In turn, the baroques include many recognized shapes such as, nuggets, dogtooth, wings, hammers, twins, barrels round-a-circle, and rosebuds. The baroques are becoming popular for use in the manufacture of rings, earrings, and pendants. Cultured pearls come in all of the same colors as natural pearls.

Freshwater shell and pearl mussels are from the family Unionidae, from which about 20 different species are commercially harvested. The common names of the most prolific species include the ebony, washboard, heelsplitter, pimple back, elephant ear, mapleleaf, three-ridge pigtoe, pistol grip, and butterfly. Peak commercial fishing is from April through September, when hundreds of independent divers operate in the rivers, streams, and lakes of the Eastern, Southern, and Central United States.

The two species most frequently used in the culturing process are commonly referred to as the Washboard and Pigtoe varieties.

The fishing and marketing of freshwater pearls and mussel shells by other than Native Americans has a long history in the United States, with the earliest recorded production probably coming from New Jersey. The formal freshwater mussel fishing industry has been established since the mid-1850’s.

America's promising pearl industry was virtually dead by 1900. Whole families, searching for pearls from Connecticut to Florida, and west to the Mississippi, overexploited the mussel resource. The industrialization of America, with accompanying pollution, decimated entire populations in many waters. Pearl discoveries became rare, and did not offer such lucrative rewards.

The American freshwater pearl was a "natural" pearl, formed when an unwelcome intruder, such as a bit of shell or a parasite, invaded the mantle of a mollusk.

The world's supply of natural pearls (both freshwater and saltwater) was reaching the point of exhaustion, and if it were not for the invention of the "cultured" pearl by three Japanese researchers, there would be no pearl industry today, and the value of a natural pearl necklace would be astronomical.

A very profitable fishery supported a large shell button industry until World War II when plastic buttons displaced shell buttons. The fishery fell into disorganization and was dormant until the early 1950's. The mother of pearl industry and bead nucleus for the Japanese culture pearl industry have supported the fishery since the 1950's.

During the 1990's, the value of U.S. mussel shell exports to Japan started at more than $50 million annually but has declined to about $35 million annually. Prior to 1992, freshwater pearls were primarily a byproduct of the shell industry. This changed with the coming of freshwater cultured pearl farms in Tennessee and California, and the increasing popularity of freshwater pearl jewelry with the U.S. consumers.

The first experimental U.S. freshwater cultured pearl farm was established in Tennessee by John Latendresse in 1963. Latendresse is the father of U.S. cultured freshwater pearls, having spent nearly 30 years and more time, money, and effort than anyone else in the research and development of the industry.

Since proving the technology for culturing freshwater pearls in the late 1970's, Mr. Latendresse has established five freshwater pearl farms. James Peach, who once worked with Latendresse, has established a single farm. Additionally, a single farm has been established in California using mussels from the Southeastern United States. These farms are the foundation of the U.S. freshwater cultured pearl industry, and the cultured pearl is the heart and future of the U.S. pearl industry.

The ultimate size of the cultured pearl industry depends on a number of factors. The acreage of pollution free water available that is suitable for farms could decide the size of the industry. Yet, even before the limitation of available suitable water comes into play, two main factors, demand for cultured freshwater pearls and the supply, or the ability of the producers to meet this demand with acceptable goods routinely, will decide the future of the industry. Some individuals have already likened these two factors to the chicken and egg question; does the demand for the pearls come first, or does the adequate supply of acceptable goods come first. Indications are that both factors are currently complementing each other, and they are contributing to the healthy growth of the young industry.

Demand for U.S. freshwater pearls is a function of quality. Quality is determined by the size, color, shape, degree of translucency, texture, ability to match and blend, and luster. Usually, the quality of U.S. freshwater pearls is as good or better than any other pearl. The possible exceptions are the availability of round pearls and the ability to match colors. Yet, it is thought by some that these exceptions are not detrimental, but that the variety of shapes and colors available are advantageous and are positive selling points.

Freshwater Pearl farming is time consuming, risky and expensive.
Before the location of Tennessee River Freshwater Pearl Farm was selected over 300 bodies of were tested for ideal conditions before the final selection of the initial eight pilot locations to begin attempts at culturing.

Mussels are gathered by divers from the murky river bottom and sold to the pearl farm operation. They are then placed in an environment to stabilize their equilibrium. Those that survive are taken to a controlled environment, for implantation. Technicians implant an irritant or nuclei into the mantle of tissue of the mussel. Nuclei can be any shape or size to pre-determine the shape of the end pearl product.

Mussels will only live about three to eight hours out of the water, so the implantation process must move rapidly. Technicians can implant as many as ten nuclei in each mussel depending on the size and age of the mussel.

The mussels are placed into baskets in groups. They are then suspended 18 inches below the top of the water dangling from American-made "bamboo" also know as PVC pipe. The mussels are left for 18 months to three years depending on the quality that is desired.

Many farms have turned to harvesting the shells used to create the pearl nuclei. The process of making pearl nuclei is to cut small cubes of shell, tumble and pressure-grind them into small balls, and insert them into salt-water oysters. Within a year the oysters had secreted a thin layer of nacre around the mussel shell to create a cultured pearl.



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There is some U.S. production of saltwater pearls. Abalone from along the Pacific Coast, primarily California, produce both blister and free pearls and their shells are used for inlay in jewelry and other items. The pearls are green, blue-green, yellow, or pink in color and may have high luster, but the texture is always coarser than that of other pearls. Some of the pearls are very large, as large as 60 carats each.

To date, all of the abalone pearls have been natural, but a move is underway to culture pearls in the farms where abalone are raised for their meat. Many of the abalone farmers are afraid of losing animals because of the culturing and have not entered the program. Possibly, in the near future an abalone cultured pearl industry may become a reality.

It also appears that attempts are underway to start a saltwater cultured pearl industry in Hawaii. The Hawaiian industry would be based upon saltwater oysters. Only time will tell of the success or failure of the abalone and Hawaiian cultured pearl programs
 


 
 
 
 
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