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'Gloire de St. Julien' clematis References
Website/Catalog  (1926)  Page(s) 55.  
 
Gloire de St-Julien, pâle, blanc-grisâtre.
Magazine  (Jun 1922)  Page(s) 91.  
 
C’est par une température tropicale que je me suis rendu, le 24 mai, à la magnifique exposition organisée à Chelsea par la Royal Horticultural Society....
Jackmann and Son, de Surrey, nous rappelle son nom par les clématites. Les variétés les plus admirées sont : Gloire de St-Julien, Blue Gem, Nellie Moser, Mrs George Jackmann, blanche, Empress of India, rose violacé, Mrs Spencer Castle, double mauve, Crimson King, rouge, Belle of Woking, double lilas.
Website/Catalog  (1914)  Page(s) 85.  
 
Clematis Gloire de St. Julien. Very large snow-white bloomwith bright golden-yellow stamens. 1 piece M 2.-
Website/Catalog  (1912)  Page(s) 78.  
 
Summer and Autumn Clematis.
In bloom from July to October.
These flower upon the wood of the current year's growth, and should therefore be pruned to five or six eyes.  
Gloire de St. Julien, white with yellow stamens; very large...  2s. 0d
Website/Catalog  (1907)  Page(s) 65.  
 
Clematis in pots to plant out in spring and summer.
General Collection.
24 Gloire de St. Julien (lanuginosa), lavender-blue.
Book  (1906)  Page(s) 52.  
 
Principal garden varieties of Clematis:
Lanuginosa type. (July to October.)
Gloire de St. Julien... White, yellow stamens.
Book  (1898)  Page(s) 62.  
 
Variétés Horticoles
1er Groupe.—PATENS
Section II. — Lanuginosa.
Gloire de Saint-Julien (Carré). Très large fleur blanche, à reflets mauves.
Magazine  (28 Oct 1882)  Page(s) 414.  
 
The Clematis in the Midlands.
...The sorts I have most successfully grown are the following, and the mode of cultivation that recommended by Mr. Jackman.  Lanuginosa type: Gem, lanuginosa, lanuginosa candida, Otto Frœbel, Princess of Wales, purpurea elegans, Gloire de St. Julienne.
Magazine  (15 Jun 1882)  Page(s) 484.  
 
Clematises.
...The varieties are now so numerous that it is not easy to make a selection, for nearly all have some special attraction of their own; but the following list includes thoroughly useful, well-proved, and distinct forms.
Single Varieties. — Fair Rosamond, blush, with reddish bars; Lord Derby, pale lavender; Lord Londesborough, deep mauve, with purplish bars; Maiden's Blush, white, tinted with rose; Sir Garnet Wolseley, bluish, barred with red; Vesta, white; Gloire de St. Julienne, French white; Robert Hanbury, lilac blue, flushed with red; Lady Caroline Neville, whitish, with lavender bars; Mrs, James Bateman, pale lavender; Jackmanni, deep purplish violet; and Star of India, bright plum, barred with red.  These are named somewhat in the order in which they flower.
Magazine  (3 Jun 1882)  Page(s) 395-6.  
 
The Manchester Floral Fete.
Next to the Orchids were the splendid Clematises shown by Mr. Jackman, of Woking.  His twenty plants were models of culture and training as well as of the best varieties.  They were trained on globular trellises, and it is hardly too much to affirm that the surface was covered with the huge flowers, not only to the hiding of the trellis, but to the covering of the leaves; the flowers ranged from 6 in[ches] to nearly 1 f[oo]t across.  [...]  Among the finer varieties were the Duchess of Edinburgh, choice double white; lanuginosa candida, Blue Gem, Miss Hope, Mrs. Moore, Princess of Wales, Lady Caroline Neville, Fairy Queen, Sensation, Lawsoniana, Alba Magna, Mrs. Hope, Gloire de St. Julienne, Duke of Teck, Duchess of Norfolk, Otto Froebel, and Madame Page.  
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