The ruby slippers played a pivotal role in the movie’s plot. Dorothy’s return from the magical land of Oz hinged on her clicking her heels three times and repeating the iconic line, “There’s no place like home.”
The pair sold at auction boasts a dramatic history. Loaned to the Judy Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, the slippers were stolen in 2005 when thief Terry Jon Martin smashed their display case. Mistakenly believing the sequins were real gemstones, Martin passed the shoes to an intermediary who ultimately discarded them.
Thirteen years later, in 2018, the FBI recovered the slippers in a sting operation. While the details of their whereabouts during those missing years remain a mystery, the theft was resolved in 2023 when Martin, then in his 70s, pleaded guilty and received a sentence of time served.
John Kelsch, curator of the Judy Garland Museum, reflected on the theft’s absurdity:
“To steal them without knowing their value as a national treasure seems ludicrous. The real worth isn’t in gemstones but in their cultural significance.”
Today, one pair of Dorothy’s ruby slippers resides at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. With their storied past and unmatched cultural significance, these slippers continue to enchant generations, proving that some treasures are truly priceless.