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Who Oldminer, Dave Atlas

oldminer

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David S. Atlas is the President and head appraiser of this 100 plus year old family firm. Six of the eight employees of the firm are Graduate Gemologists, GIA and the other members of this all professionally staffed firm are actively studying gemology. David Atlas supervises the laboratory services and heads an Accredited Gemologists Association, Accredited Gem Laboratory which has operated at this same location for many years.David Atlas and two of the appraiser/buyers in the firm are Senior Members of the National Association of Jewelry Appraisers. Michael Jordan, Edward Skinner, Jr., and David Atlas were all awarded the title of Master Gemologist Appraiser from the Accredited Gemologists Association. Christian DiCamillo, GG,(GIA) and Member NAJA coordinates our Internet appraisal activities.

Accredited Gem Appraisers supplies jewelry appraisals and diamond grading documents for dealers, the jewelry trade, and the general public. We are creators of the AGA-CERT® which not only grades diamonds for carat, color, clarity, but includes a CUT GRADE for all shapes stones. AGA was the first national gem laboratory to offer a cut grade for round and fancy shaped diamonds.

Pamela Kudysch, GG,(GIA) and Certified Senior Member, NAJA, operates our independent Doylestown office in partnership with David Atlas.

D. Atlas & Co., Inc certifies the grading of Diamond and Gem Laboratories of America, located outside Philadelphia, PA. Mr. Atlas is a partner in that laboratory and head of the grading lab services provided there for major chain stores and high volume vendors.

Mr. Atlas is also affiliated with Imagem, Inc., www.imagememinc.com, as a consultant, advisor and owner of a very small portion of this company, bringing automated diamond grading to the marketplace in 2004.
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DAVID S. ATLAS
President, D. Atlas & Co., Inc., Est. 1898
and Accredited Gem Appraisers
732 Sansom St.
Phila., PA. 19106
Partner, Accredited Gem Appraisers of Doylestown, LLC
33 Union St. suite #3
Doylestown, PA 18901
215-873-2378x120 E-Fax: 305-574-8191
E-Mail: [email protected]
URLs: www.gemappraisers.com www.datlas.com

Diplomas:
Graduate Gemologist, Gemological Institute of America, 1975.
National Association of Jewelry Appraisers, Senior Member 1992 to present.
Accredited Senior Gemologist, designation from the Accredited Gemologists Association. Member since 1981.


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Certified Gemologist AGS., 1974 to 1997.
Accredited Senior Appraiser, Master Gemologist AppraiserÒ, American Society of Appraisers, 1977-1998.

Master Gemologist Appraiser designation awarded by Accredited Gemologists Association, 1984.
Expertise:
Diamonds, colored gems, precious metals, jewelry manufacturing, stone setting, antique jewelry, enameling and engraving, gem identification, and collectibles. Appraisals at all levels.
Gem Laboratory:
David Atlas has a complete gem lab facility certified by the Accredited Gemologists Association.
GIA graded diamond color master stones are part of this lab equipment. AGL Color Scan, GemSet, and GemDialogue units. GIA Gran I & II and Austron were tested in our lab over a long period, but eye color grading and the SAS 2000 Spectrophotometer are relied upon. A Sarin Diamension and Ogi Megascope units are in operation in our lab.

David Atlas is known as the creator of the AGA-CERTâ, a diamond grading report that includes a diamond cut grading system developed by David Atlas beginning in 1985 which is now widely accepted by the diamond trade all around the USA and abroad.
Partner with Pamela Kudysch in AGA of Doylestown, LLC, established July 2001.

Professional Experience:
President of D. Atlas & Co., Inc. established in 1898 in Philadelphia by Mr. Atlas' grandfather. Accredited Gem Appraisers is the appraisal division of D. Atlas & Co., Inc. Active in the jewelry business since 1969 and became firm president in 1977. Not only an appraiser, but is an estate buyer, manufacturer, and seller of gems and jewelry doing business throughout the entire USA. Active participation in the trade gives the most current and credible knowledge of markets, prices and practices. 1969-present.
Appraisal Editor, In Store Magazine. 2002

Consultant, Instructor and Associate Director of the National Association of Jewelry Appraisers.
Consultant and Appraiser. Philadelphia District Attorney's Office during the Ron Perlstein prosecution in the misrepresentation of diamonds. 1985-1987.
Internal Revenue Service Appraiser. Worked on two separate appraisals of donated gems: large topaz located in the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; large selection of kunzite crystals located in the American Natural History Museum, New York City, 1986.
Consultant and Appraiser. FBI and Philadelphia District Attorney's Offices. Worked in all matters of seized jewelry properties resulting from the arrest of drug dealers' property confiscation. Providing auction estimates. 1989-present.
Consultant. Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority in the condemnation of a local business property that included jewelry stores and their inventories. 1990-1997.
Consultant and Instructor. American Society of Appraisers, Master Gemologist Appraiser Program. Developed instructional materials and testing of candidate members. 1988-1992.
Appraiser on call for U.S. Customs: 1993-1998. Port of Philadelphia.
Consultant on call to the Federal Trade Commission 1993-1996.
Consultant to the Gemological Institute of America in the development of their appraisal course 1995/96.
Certified as a mediator, State of New York. 1995
Special Correspondent to the Rapaport Diamond Report Magazine, June 1998 issue, Old Cut Diamonds Return to Fashion Spotlight.
Mr. Atlas has been admitted as an expert witness in City, County, and Federal courts numerous times. Details are available on a complete CV. which you may request.
Activities:
Appraisal Editor, In Store Magazine, 2002
Associate Director, Chairman of Ethics Committee, and Lecturer, National Association of Jewelry Appraisers, 1992 - Present.
Treasurer and Member, Executive Board, Philadelphia Jewelers' Row Association, 1986 - Present.

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Past Member, Board of Directors, Philadelphia Chapter, American Society of Appraisers. 1985 to 1998.
Past Chairman, Ethics and Grievance Committee, Accredited Gemologists Association, 1986 - 1995.
Past International Chairman, Gem and Jewelry Committee, American Society of Appraisers, 1991 - 1992.
Past Member, Gem and Jewelry Committee, American Society of Appraisers, 1986 - 1988; 1989 - 1992.
Past Advisor and Member, International Board of Examiners, American ociety of Appraisers, 1986 - 1987; 1989 - 1992.
Past Chairman and Member, Admissions Committee, Philadelphia Chapter, American Society of Appraisers, 1986 - 1990.
Past Instructor, American Society of Appraisers, Master Gemologist Appraiser Course, 1987 - 1992., USPAP Course, 1994.
1988-1992 Secretary/Treasurer, Vice-President and President, Philadelphia Chapter, American Society of Appraisers.
1991 Chairman, Personal Property Committee Program, American Society of Appraisers International Conference held in Philadelphia.
Past Education Advisor, JAG, Jewelers Advisory Group, an organization that promoted honesty and education in the jewelry industry. 1995 - 1998.
Past Member, Nomenclature Committee, American Gem Society, 1984-1997

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And for those of you who want even more.....:


The David Atlas family. Three generations in the jewelry business.
David Atlas left Shepatovka, Russia at the age of 12, all alone. The time was about 1888. He walked to Paris where a job as an apprentice jewelry craftsman was either pre-arranged or found. He stayed 4 years in Paris, learned to make jewelry and located a similar job in London, as his goal was immigration to the USA.

On the way to London his boat sank in the English Channel. His hand made jewelry manufacturing tools were lost along with all his possessions. He survived and still got to London. All the tools needed to be made over. He eventually became well trained and saved enough to come to Philadelphia. This was another 3 to 4 years.

My belief is that he arrived in about 1896 and by 1898 opened his own jewelry making firm, D. Atlas & Co. This business was located at 700 Sansom St. He must have been successful as he began the process of building a business and also bringing relatives to the States.

He married on a pre-arranged basis and brought his bride to be and her 13 brothers and sisters over in various stages. Some of them were not really brothers and sisters, but they came as "family". He brought some other people over from his hometown that were not related at all. All used new names and they became official members of the family unit. Some worried about “the immigration” until the day they died. They did not want to be deported for using a false name.

In 1911 he built the building still standing at 721 Sansom St. His firm occupied the entire first floor. Sometime before WWI he was contacted by a cousin in Belgium about importing diamonds. Dave Atlas was one of the very first diamond dealers in the USA. We had some old records of the imports showing a two or three dollars for 1 carat sized stones. Money was a little more valuable than it is today. Inflation has taken a large toll.

His trips to Europe were once or twice a year to buy diamonds and bring them home. This was the time of steam ships. He was gone for weeks at a time. Life moved at a slower pace.


My grandfather had a LaSalle car with a chauffeur in the 1920's. His wife never drove or had a license, as she was always taken care of. He had three children who went to Philadelphia Public Schools. They all went to the University of Pennsylvania and graduated with degrees. My dad graduated from the Wharton School. The daughters married well and went on to live traditional American homemaker lives with all the comforts, vacations, cars and expected luxuries. The first daughter, who graduated from Penn before the depression received a new, paid for house as a wedding gift, when she moved to Cedar Rapids, Iowa. This is just an example of the sort of father figure he was to his whole family.

This had been accomplished by a man who had only a fourth grade education, one who could barely read until late in life and with great practice. He was a very religious man who always observed the holidays, Sabbath and rituals. He brought his parents to the USA in the early 1900’s. They stayed a year but went back to Russia, as the USA was not religious enough for their tastes.

Things were good through the 1920’s but my grandfather had made a critical error. He had signed a guarantee for a loan for the construction of a hotel in Miami Beach when the world was blindsided by the crash of the stock market. The note eventually was called and my grandfather lost his millions completely. He knew he could work with nothing, as he had succeeded before. He began again.


He went through bankruptcy but worked until the middle of WWII to pay every person he owed everything back. He was known all around Philadelphia and New York City as a most honest and ethical person. Everyone that knew him told me I ought to follow in his footsteps. I never met him other than he lived long enough to hold me in his arms for a photo when I was about a year old. I was born in 1947 and he died in 1948. I was named not only for him but also for my other grandfather, David Gottlieb who was also alive at the time and was a practicing dentist in Trinidad, CO. Both were happy to have been around when I was born and had no objection to me being named in their honor.

A plaque on our wall in the office is the 50 year award from the Sansom St. Businessmen's’ Association dated 1948. It is a constant reminder of where we have been and who we are. Every day presents challenges that have been overcome by honesty and ethical action.


A plaque presented to our firm in 1948 for service to the local trade is still on our office walls. My father was a trained businessman and a graduate of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He brought a very orderly mind to the jewelry business. He and my grandfather worked together before and after WWII. They bought and sold second hand jewelry. Since they had little working capital, they bought on a day’s credit, sold immediately and then paid. With a good reputation this was possible, and they made a living, not a great one, but they got by.

During WWII my father met my mother on a blind date while he was in the Air Force stationed in Colorado. My dad suffered from the family genetics of otosclerosis which leads to deafness and was in a hospital out West recovering from some ear surgery. She was one of the early lady’s lawyers and has recently graduated from the University of Colorado Law School in Boulder, CO. They married in 1946 and joined the baby boom with me.



I was the only child and although I had every option open to me, I went into the family business in December 1967. I suffered all the trauma of being the only child of educated parents who both excelled in school. I proved to them that genetics aside, I could still be a trying and difficult student. It pleased them greatly that I also went to U of P, but it pained them much more when I left after two years, during the Vietnam War. I had a low draft number and finally found a slot in the Army reserve. I left school without any hesitation and went to work with my father. I don’t regret my decision as it was the right one for me, but one should not assume that they will be so lucky or such a good fit into a family business.

My father took the early gemology courses offered by the Gemological Institute of America in the early 1950’s and received his Graduate Diploma in 1953 or 1954. In 1959 he joined the staff of Marcus and Co located in Gimbels at 8th & Market and they trained him to be an appraiser. Under his guidance I became an appraiser, a gemologist and an estate jewelry buyer. All the courses he took and many more have been long ago taken and completed. I now teach these to newcomers on a national level and also oversee the education of my office staff who have either passed or are working toward their gemological and appraisal degrees and titles.

I have two employees I hired more than 25 years ago and several in the teens. Treating employees as if they were family, providing benefits and security is the only way I know how to operate. We hope to continue this method for as many more years as possible. It is wonderful to have a staff that knows what they are doing and has the training to properly assist customers.

It has been a good life and a success. It is not easy to work with a perfectionist parent, as they never let you grow up completely. My dad slowly gave up the reins over an extended period beginning in 1982 and ending at his passing in 1997. He never lost interest and never failed to give his sage advice even if I didn‘t want to hear it. I think I learned about all I was capable of learning with him and use his teachings and philosophy as a tool in daily decision-making. No doubt, some of what my father taught me, he learned from his father.

Things change, but the principles of good business begin with honesty and ethics. I believe I have continued to extend that initial goal which all small businesses quest for. The nature and size of the business has grown and changed over these 104 years, but it still is a small business. With my two children well fixed in other fields, it will be the end of this as a family business when I hang up my loupe. That may be a few years yet, but by that time I will have tried to make my grandfather and father as proud of me as I am of them. I hope their spirits look in on me from time to time and they still like what they see.


David S. Atlas
Grandson of the Founder, D. Atlas & Co., Inc.
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Oh My!!! What a resume'!!!!! Congrats! That's very impressive!
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Wonderful history Dave. Thanks for the interesting read.
 
Let's hear some more, Dave.

What are your hobbies? Your loves, your vices?

What do you enjoy most about the gemstone/jewelery business, and hate the worst?

Are you glad you started the NAJA, or has it increased your workload a thousand times?
 
You never know, Dave - a grandchild might follow along. After all, it's in the blood. Wonderful story.
 
Dave,

Your family's saga is an incredible one and I can imagine it would hold audiences riveted if presented as a mini-series on PBS. Will you bring us up to date, though? Please tell us the rest of your story, the story of your *own* wife, children, and (is it still only one?) grandchild!

Deborah :-)
 
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On 11/10/2003 9:36:44 PM Mikesgirl wrote:

You never know, Dave - a grandchild might follow along. After all, it's in the blood. Wonderful story.----------------


I believe he has at least one, Marty ;-).

Deb
 
Whoops! One more question, Dave. When did your father graduate from Wharton? Fire&ice's father graduated from there, too, back when an MBA was a rarity!

Deb
 
He walked from Russia to Paris.
That speaks volumes about his character.
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My father graduated from Wharton in 1933. Not a very good time for entering any business.

I think the walk from Russia to Paris was prompted because of financial considerations and the times people lived in over there. It was bad enough for waves of migration to seek new homes in strange lands. People were commonly "on the road" back then. It was a very different world back then. Very hard to imagine today.
 
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On 11/13/2003 7:34:13 AM oldminer wrote:

My father graduated from Wharton in 1933. Not a very good time for entering any business.

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Way before my father's time to answer your question AGBF. I don't know the exact date; but, it was definitely after WWII.

Interesting history Dave. I'm always fascinated by the hardships & subsequent success stories of immigrants. Both my parents were first generation here in the US.
 
WOW! This is so much more than many would ever show or tell, even of the few who could...
 
Wow, great history!
 
Great History and nice resume Dave..It's always nice too see your input on the board here!
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It was nice to read about you, the Old Miner, a.k.a. Mr. David Atlas. I read your little biographical introduction, and I wondered if you ever thought about writing a book on your family tree. I found your last paragraph quite touching. Your words, "Things change, but the principles of good business begin with honesty and ethics. I believe I have continued to extend that initial goal which all small businesses quest for. The nature and size of the business has grown and changed over these 104 years, but it still is a small business. With my two children well fixed in other fields, it will be the end of this as a family business when I hang up my loupe. That may be a few years yet, but by that time I will have tried to make my grandfather and father as proud of me as I am of them. I hope their spirits look in on me from time to time and they still like what they see." Well, I really don't think you have to worry about your grandfather or your father ever doubting you or your path in life since you obviously haven't lost sight of two important things that everybody should uphold which is honesty and ethics. It's a real shame that not every jeweler or every person, for that matter, upholds some of the basic principles in life that you talk about. But no doubt, I'm sure that for every unethical or dishonest person out there, it's always a pleasure to meet someone who is the exact opposite. It would be a true blessing in life if everybody had your charming and caring personality. Maybe your story will touch others as it has touched me.
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Speaking off the subject, have you ever travelled to the town of Carlisle before? The town has a rich history itself that I think you might enjoy. Thanks for the interesting read. Please post more of your family's history. I found it very interesting and it contained a lot of important lessons in life that I'm glad that people still practice today. Take Care.
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I had a face-to-face emerald appraisal/consultation with David Atlas the other morning on Jewelers Row in Philadelphia, my first appraisal; I found it to be a very positive experience. He was exceptionally helpful and gave me what I consider to be very valuable advice on a variety of emerald-related subjects. I talked with him for about an hour and a half, and believe it or not, he actually tried to UNDERcharge me for his time; he said that he didn''t want to charge me "for just having a conversation." (!). I am not a gem expert, by any stretch of the imagination, but from my personal experience, I would highly recommend Mr. Atlas to anyone who was considering an appraisal.
 
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