Sending troops inspiration
- Share via
Paul Clinton
Bob Siemon’s moment of inspiration is finding its way onto the necks
of U.S. Marines in Iraq.
Siemon, a Newport Beach resident and former hippie, has begun
manufacturing the “shield of faith,” a pewter necklace and lapel pin
that families of U.S. soldiers can mail to their loved ones in the
Persian Gulf.
Inspiration struck Siemon during a sleepless night in mid-January,
after a conversation at a Riverside trade show with the mother of a
soldier stationed in Iraq. Siemon said he was disturbed to learn that
the woman had nothing to send her son in the field.
Now, the soldier can wear the dog tag shield necklace and the
relative can wear a smaller, matching lapel pin.
“It’s kind of a partnership, a bond,” Siemon said. “If you’re in
one of those terrifying situations, it would be a sense of
protection.”
Siemon, whose company makes inspirational jewelry, manufacturers
the 1/2-inch-by- 3/4-inch shield necklace at his Santa Ana factory.
The pewter necklace is engraved with a quote from the book of Joshua
urging strength and courage.
In two weeks, Siemon has sold more than 50,000 units of both the
necklaces and pins. Siemon sells them to about 5,000 Christian
churches and bookshops across the nation.
At the bookstore at Mariner’s Church, on the border of Newport
Beach and Irvine, they have been a hot-selling item, bookstore
assistant Mary Blunden said.
“We’re so close to Camp Pendleton that there are a lot of families
in the area,” Blunden said. “They like that it’s a token to remember
their loved ones.”
The shield necklaces sell for $5.99; the pins for $3.99. They are
also available through the company’s Web site (www.bobsiemon.com).
Siemon, who comes from humble beginnings, has found a way to turn
his inspiration into a commercially successful business. As a
19-year-old art student in 1969, Siemon sold silver rings with
“peace” and “Jesus saves” engravings from a circus wagon in
Calabasas.
In 1975, shortly after moving to Newport Beach, Siemon opened a
Christian jewelry shop at the intersection of Sunflower Avenue and
Fairview Road in Costa Mesa.
His goal of producing “inspired products” has led to a business
that produces a full line of guardian-angel pins, cross pendants,
leather Bible covers and a range of rings.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.