Geraldine R. Dodge judged at major dog shows in every American state as well as the premier shows in Germany, Canada, Ireland, and England. She was the first woman invited to judge for the
Westminster Kennel Club, where she was invited to judge the
Best in Show. She was the author of two books,
The English Cocker Spaniel in America, and
The German Shepherd Dog in America, the latter of which was a collaboration with her curator of art, Josephine Z. Rine. She was recognized as a
philanthropist, a benefactor to communities, the arts, nonprofit and natural resource efforts, as an author, a judge of dogs, a breeder of dogs, the founder of the Morris and Essex Dog Club and its internationally recognized annual exhibition in May that was considered the most prestigious dog show held in the United States of America for decades, and the founder of St. Hubert's Giralda, a refuge for injured and lost animals. St. Hubert's Giralda, now known as St. Hubert's Animal Welfare Center, founded in 1939, still operates on the grounds of Dodge's former Giralda Farms estate in
Madison, New Jersey. She was a significant sponsor for American sculptor
Cyrus Dallin who visited Hartley Farms several times with his wife. When Mrs. Dodge's significant art collection was posthumously auctioned, it included 20 bronze Dallin sculptures including
Passing of the Buffalo or
The Last Arrow. In 1975 this sculpture sold for $150,000 a record for a piece of American Sculpture at the time. ==Legacy==