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'Double Light Red' rose References
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 86.  
 
Double Light Red Rose with purplish hue, cupped petals, confused, showing paler backs. Flowers soon after double red.
Book  (1839)  Page(s) 217.  
 
ROSACEÆ.
Garden Varieties
I. spinosissima.
143  red, double light
Book  (1833)  Page(s) 119.  
 
Icosandria Polygynia.
Rosa, Rose.
New garden varieties of the Spinosissima, in the Rosarium Scoticum
Double Light Red.
Book  (1832)  Page(s) 568.  
 
The following are the names of the Garden varieties of the Scotch Rose.
Double Scotch Roses
.
double light red.
Website/Catalog  (1829)  Page(s) 34.  
 
Rosa.  Rose.  Rosaceæ.  Icosandria.  Polygynia.  Common soil.
R. spinosissima,  Scotch,  blooms June, August,  height of 5 feet
121.  double light red
Website/Catalog  (1826)  Page(s) 47.  
 
ROSES. Rosa.
Class, Icosandria.  Order, Polygynia.
339  Double light red Scotch... 50 cents
Magazine  (1822)  Page(s) 285, 296.  
 
[From "Descriptions and Account of the Varieties of Double Scotch Roses, cultivated in the Gardens of England. By Joseph Sabine, Esq. F. R. S. &c. Secretary, p. 281-305]
p. 285: they [Dickson and Brown] in 1802 and 1803 had eight (*As nearly I have been able to ascertain, the eight sorts were the small white, the small yellow, the lady's blush, another lady's blush with smooth footstalks, the red, the light red, the dark marbled, and the large two-coloured.) good double varieties to dispose of...
p. 296: The Double Light Red is also an early variety, blossoming soon after the Double red. Its peduncles are generally smooth, but sometimes there is a slight hispidity on them; the germen is semi-globose, and the sepals rather long; the bud shew but little colour, and the flower, when opened, is more cupped than that of the preceding [Double Red], and less brilliant in its colour, which insttead of being purely rose, is tinged with a purplish hue, and the whole is paler; the petals, when opened fully, have a rather confused appearance, and shew much of their pale backs. The fruits are black, few in number, small and globose, with a slightly extended neck. This Rose has much affinity to the Light Marbled in the next section; it might, without impropriety, be called the Pale Purple Red, but the name under which I have described it seems generally to have been attached to it in the nurseries.
........edges of the petals ultimately blanched, as in the two others.
Website/Catalog  (1820)  Page(s) 37.  
 
ROSA flore pleno
629.  light red scotch
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