|
'Woodland Margaret' rose References
Newsletter (May 2013) Page(s) 3. Pentland also produced two noisettes, ‘Dr. Kane’ in 1856, and ‘Woodland Marguerite’ in 1859, and also the bourbon ‘George Peabody’ in 1857, a purple-crimson flower still popular until World War I.
Book (1936) Page(s) 762. Woodland Margaret (noisette) Pentland 1859; ?
Website/Catalog (1889) Page(s) 19. Woodland Marguerite — Delicate, pure white, very double, of medium size, with slender branches and handsome foliage an excellent pillar rose for the south.
Magazine (Sep 1880) Page(s) 142. Roses Noisette, ou Rose Champney, ou Rose mousseuse hybride .... R. Woodland Marguerite (Pentland, 1849). Variété vigoureuse, fleur blanc pur. Floraison abondante.
Magazine (1 Apr 1880) Page(s) 60. [From "NOTICE SUR LES ROSES AMÉRICAINES" by H.B. Ellwanger, read at the Horticultural Society of Rochester on 29 January 1880] Noisettes ... Woodland Marguerite (James Pentland, 1860). — Vigoureuse, fleurs blanc pur et abondantes.
Magazine (1879) Page(s) 67. "American Roses." By H. B. Ellwanger. Noisette Roses, or Champney [sic] Roses. Woodland Marguerite (James Pentland, of Baltimore, 1859). Growth vigorous; flowers pure white, freely produced.
Website/Catalog (1876) Page(s) 24. General Collection — Ever-blooming Roses. Woodland Margaret. — Buff white; medium size; free bloomer.
Magazine (Apr 1859) Page(s) 379. ....Annexed is the list of the best six varieties of each class of everblooming roses:...Noisette or Cluster-Flowering Roses. Augusta....Isabella Gray....Jacques Amyot....Madame des Longchamps....Sir Walter Scott....Woodland Margaret; pure white....The above thirty varieties will be carefully packed and forwarded, by express or any other conveyance that may be specified, for ten dollars. H. A. Dreer, Seedsman and Florist, 327 Chestnut Street.
Magazine (1857) Mr. Pentland of Baltimore has also sent out two new roses — Beauty of Greenmount and Woodland Margaret. The former is a valuable acquisition to the Noisettes, forces remarkably well, and is prettier than the colored portraits which he distributes with the rose. Woodland Margaret I have not yet seen in bloom. The best American seedling of this season which I have seen, is "Thorburn's Combatant", raised by George C. Thorburn of Newark, N. J. - a finely scented Tea, large and full, color blush and pale flesh, and will average about eighty large...
|