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'Hundred-leaved daily' rose References
Article (magazine)  (Feb 2013)  Page(s) 4.  
 
Buist bred several roses. Among them were two hybrid chinas, ‘Hibbertia’, named for his partner [Thomas Hibbert], and ‘Jacksonia’, probably named for the seventh president of the United States. Both appeared about 1830.
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 366.  
 
Jacksonia (Bengal) Buist ca. 1830 = Hundred-leaved Daily.
Book  (1922)  Page(s) 177.  
 
Official List of Roses Introduced in America. Compiled by Charles E. F. Gersdorff
Jacksonia, China.* (Buist, about 1830.)

*variety no longer in commerce
Book  (1852)  Page(s) 68.  
 
Rosa Indica or (Bengal of the French) Chinese Ever-blooming Roses.
Jacksonia*, hundred-leaved daily, or crimson daily, bright red, large and most perfectly double, of luxuriant growth, and more prickly (spines) than any other rose of the sort we have seen.

*In compliment to the late President Jackson.
Website/Catalog  (1844)  Page(s) 4.  
 
Everblooming Chinese Roses.
Bengal.
This class of Roses is particularly hardy, enduring the severest winters of the middle States; constant blooming, and many of them very fragrant.
50 cents each — per dozen $3 to $5.
Jacksonia...  bright red
Book  (1834)  Page(s) 186.  
 
China Roses.
No. 25. *Rosa Jacksonia, is deep red, large, and very double, of luxuriant growth; is more spiny and elastic than any of the China roses that have come under our observation. The plant altogether is unique in its character, and flowers profusely.

*Those marked thus * we have grown from seed.
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