|
'Desantres' rose References
Newsletter (May 2013) Page(s) 3. The man who produced the most roses of this thirty-year period was Anthony Cook, also of Baltimore. Of fifteen roses, four were teas (‘Cornelia Cook’, ‘Desantres’, ‘Paradine’, and ‘Caroline Cook’)...
Magazine (23 Feb 1886) Page(s) 150, Vol 2. Desantres (A. Cook, 1855). "colour flesh, very distinct from any other Tea Rose; a better bloomer than Cornelia Cook, and a good winter flower. Raised from Devoniensis."
Magazine (1 Apr 1880) Page(s) 61. [From "NOTICE SUR LES ROSES AMÉRICAINES" by H.B. Ellwanger, read at the Horticultural Society of Rochester on 29 January 1880] Rosa indica odorata. — (Rosiers thés.) Desantres (Anthony Cook, 1855). — Couleur chair très-distinct d’aucun autre thé. Fleurissant mieux que Cornélia Cook. Bonne plante de serre. Issu de Devoniensis.
|