John Lupia submitted the following information from his Encyclopedic Dictionary of Numismatic Biographies for this
week's installment of his series. Thanks! As always, this is an excerpt with the full article and bibliography available online. This
week's subject is New York coin and antiquity dealer Dikran Kelekian. -Editor
Dikran G. Kelekian circa 1893 and 1938
Dikran Garabed Kelekian (1868-1951), art, antiquities and coin collector and dealer. He was born December 31, 1868, in Caesarea, Turkey,
son of an Armenian banker from Kayseri (Caesarea), Turkey.
He appears to have begun his career somehow involved in the archaeological excavations of medieval Persian ceramics south of Tehran at
Rayy (Rhey), probably at the time of the British archaeologist George Nathaniel Curzon (1859-1925), between 1889-1890.
He and his brother Havannes (Turkish, Kevork) opened a shop in Istanbul, Turkey around 1890. In 1892, the government appointed him
Commissioner of the Persian Pavilion at the World Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois. En route to America he and his brother Havannes
opened shop at London sometime around the winter of 1892. He left Liverpool, England sailing on the SS Campania in April 1893 and arrived
in New York city where he remained becoming a Naturalized U. S. citizen on May 10, 1893.
He arrived in Chicago about mid November 1893. Eight months later he met Robert A. McClure, Curator of the Cabinet of the United States
Mint. [There is a] tongue-in-cheek report by a Philadelphia journalist of McClure's meeting with Kelekian at the Chicago World's Fair.
The Philadelphia Telegraph, June 15, 1894, reprinted in The Pottsville Review, June 16, 1894 and also in The Numismatist,
August (1894) : 159.
He opened shop at 303 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York about January 1896. There he and his brother sold art, antiquities and ancient
coins and served as agents for buyers including at auctions. He became a correspondent with the Chapman Brothers and served as a supplier
for Greek and Roman coins for their patrons.
In the Summer of 1896 the Ottoman rulers of Turkey experienced political disturbances and tensions surmounted. Kelekian served as the
secretary of ex-Patriarch Izmirlian in Istanbul, Turkey. In September 1896 Kelekian was forced out of Istanbul, since he was harassed by
police who continuously followed him throughout the city. He opened shop with his brother Kevork at Paris, France. Shortly afterwards he
published political essays in French on the political solution to the crisis in Turkey opting to use the Austro-Hungarian Constitution to
relinquish the meddling of the affairs of state by the Sultan and give the citizens a greater say in matters.
In 1904, he exhibited antiquities and rare coins at the Saint Louis Exposition and traded foreign and ancient coins with Farran Zerbe.
In 1909 he help found the Armenian General Benevolent Union serving on the Board of Directors and also an orphanage named Dikran
Kelekian in the Turkish city of Deort Yol.
By about 1910 he moved his shop to 709 Fifth Avenue, New York.
By about 1930 he moved his shop to the second floor, 598 Madison Avenue, New York.
On December 30, 1936 he was married at Manhattan, New York.
By about 1940 he moved his shop to 20 East 57th Street, New York.
He died from a fatal fall from the twenty-third floor of the St. Moritz Hotel in New York City on January 30, 1951.
To read the complete article, see:
KELEKIAN, DIKRAN GARABED
(https://sites.google.com/a/numismaticmall.com
/www/numismaticmall-com/kelekian-dikran-gar)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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