Margaret Thatcher auction nets unexpected $6.8 million

LONDON - The lady's certainly for earning.

An auction of artifacts belonging to late British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher -- including her wedding dress and signature handbags -- has raised 4.5 million pounds ($6.8 million), many times its pre-sale estimate.

Christie's sold more than 400 items through a live and online auction. It said Thursday that the sales attracted bids from 44 countries, and every single lot was sold.

An employee holds The Prime Ministerial Dispatch Box during an auction preview at Christie's in London on Dec. 11, 2015. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls

A model of a bald eagle presented to Thatcher by Cold War ally President Ronald Reagan was expected to fetch 8,000 pounds ($12,000) but sold for 266,500 pounds ($404,014), while her red ministerial dispatch box fetched 242,500 pounds ($367,630).

The blue velvet dress she wore to her 1951 wedding sold for 25,000 pounds ($38,000), and an Art Deco emerald and diamond necklace for 158,500 pounds ($240,286).

Another top lot was a silver bowl engraved with one of Thatcher's most famous phrases: "The lady's not for turning," which sold for 47,500 pounds ($72,010).

Branded the "Iron Lady" for her steely determination, Thatcher governed Britain between 1979 and 1990. She died in April 2013 aged 87, and the collection was sold by her family.

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