HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
Article (newspaper)Plants ReferencedPhotosReviews & CommentsRatings 
The Australasian
(10 Nov 1934)  Page(s) 41.  
 
Newer Roses. At the monthly meeting of the society on November 1..... Mr. James Allan, the president, said that Mr. Clark has promised a new variety ‘Advance Australia’, to the National Rose society, but will not finally release the rose until sure that it will flower through spring, summer, and autumn. The variety is red, somewhat like Etoile de Hollande’.
(8 Nov 1930)  Page(s) 38.  
 
ROSE SHOW. [...] Mr. Alister Clark, Bulla, staged a striking collection of roses, [...] Among new seedlings to be sent out this season (or not yet sent out) there was some very choice material. [...] The new variety, Amy Johnson, is a rich deep pink, a strong bush or pillar rose. It is sweetly scented, has healthy foliage, and, like Lorraine Lee, will continue flowering, through the winter.
(8 Nov 1930)  Page(s) 38.  
 
ROSE SHOW. [...] Mr. Alister Clark, Bulla, staged a striking collection of roses, [...] Among new seedlings to be sent out this season (or not yet sent out) there was some very choice material. [...] The new variety, Amy Johnson, is a rich deep pink, a strong bush or pillar rose. It is sweetly scented, has healthy foliage, and, like Lorraine Lee, will continue flowering, through the winter.
(4 Nov 1893)  Page(s) 10.  
 
Notes From Other Lands. 
Rose Archiduchesse Marie Immaculata (a badly-named variety) is described as a fine " tea " variety, sent out in l887, having a colour almost indescribable, being an admixture of coppery and metallic red hues such as are found in "L'Ideal', only the flower is larger, fuller, and has a bold appearance.
(22 Apr 1922)  Page(s) 9.  
 
In Mr. Alister Clark’s exhibit of seedling roses, beautiful blooms of ‘Gwen Nash’ and ‘Australia Felix’ were shown. The latter variety has not met with the popularity it deserves, mostly because growers will not have patience to keep it going until well established. It does not do itself justice within the first one or two years, but is invaluable for winter blooming, and Mr. Clark has decorated a banquet hall with it in June.
(28 May 1938)  Page(s) 38.  
 
In a choice of varieties for bedding, where perhaps a dozen roses of one variety are planted, the natural shape of the bush should have consideration as well as the colour and quality of the flowers. .... Australia Felix is another ideal bedding rose, not valued nearly as highly as it should be in gardens; pink on a white base, the flowers are borne over eight to ten months of the year. 
(9 Jul 1927)  Page(s) 17.  
 
The list of 12 climbing roses published last week among the roses recommended by the National Rose Society of Victoria represents the leading varieties suitable for growing on pergolas, fences, arches, summer-houses, and on the walls of one story houses. ‘Black Boy’ and ‘Marion Manifold’, the first two roses on the list are both red roses, and are both Australian raised....... ‘Black Boy’ was raised by Mr. Alister Clark and sent out in 1919. It seems to be improving in vigour and constitution with the years. Like ‘Miss Marion Manifold’ it may be planted in positions where its strong-growing tendencies can have free play, and will succeed in all soils and under hot conditions. Like most of the hybrid tea roses, the largest percentage of blooms are carried through the spring and autumn, but even in January blooms may be gathered freely from a well-grown plant.
 
(28 May 1938)  Page(s) 38.  
 
Or let us consider roses of greater size, roses with landscape value. There are the three Banksian roses, Banksia alba, B. Fortunei, and Banksia lutea; alba is pure white, lutea yellow, and Fortunei a large white flower, distinct from alba. How fortunate we are that these fine old roses, natives of China, will thrive to perfection in our climate.
They will grow through and over a tree 40 feet in height, but must not be planted at the base of the tree, where the soil has been robbed of its value and rain cannot reach the roots. Rather plant 14 to 15 feet away from the trunk in well enriched soil, then, as the rose grows, train the strong branches over towards the tree on supports. As soon as the strong supporting trunk of the tree is sensed by the plant, it will do the rest. Some of Mr. Alister Clark's climbing roses are nearly as vigorous growing, notably Courier, double, pink on a white ground; and Traverser, so called because it spread a distance of 40 feet along trellis supports in Mr. Clark's garden at Bulla, Victoria. The flowers, yellow and cream, are double, and very freely borne in spring. Tonner's Fancy is of the same type, the buds, somewhat resembling those of Maman Cochet in shape, full, the colour delicate cream, turning to white. Cherub, by the same raiser, if given support, will rise and make a large bush up to 20 or 25 feet high. Grown through a mature pear tree in Mr. Clark's garden, in a few years the pear tree was completely lost to view. The main sheet of salmon-pink flowers is borne in spring, followed by a more limited flowering in autumn.
 
 
(28 May 1938)  Page(s) 38.  
 
Or let us consider roses of greater size, roses with landscape value. There are the three Banksian roses, Banksia alba, B. Fortunei, and Banksia lutea; alba is pure white, lutea yellow, and Fortunei a large white flower, distinct from alba. How fortunate we are that these fine old roses, natives of China, will thrive to perfection in our climate.
They will grow through and over a tree 40 feet in height, but must not be planted at the base of the tree, where the soil has been robbed of its value and rain cannot reach the roots. Rather plant 14 to 15 feet away from the trunk in well enriched soil, then, as the rose grows, train the strong branches over towards the tree on supports. As soon as the strong supporting trunk of the tree is sensed by the plant, it will do the rest. Some of Mr. Alister Clark's climbing roses are nearly as vigorous growing, notably Courier, double, pink on a white ground; and Traverser, so called because it spread a distance of 40 feet along trellis supports in Mr. Clark's garden at Bulla, Victoria. The flowers, yellow and cream, are double, and very freely borne in spring. Tonner's Fancy is of the same type, the buds, somewhat resembling those of Maman Cochet in shape, full, the colour delicate cream, turning to white. Cherub, by the same raiser, if given support, will rise and make a large bush up to 20 or 25 feet high. Grown through a mature pear tree in Mr. Clark's garden, in a few years the pear tree was completely lost to view. The main sheet of salmon-pink flowers is borne in spring, followed by a more limited flowering in autumn.
 
(1894)  
 
From the following website: http://localhistory.kingston.vic.gov.au/htm/article/223.htm
1894. December. The Australasian [ From Rose Growing during the Land Boom in Mentone, by Helen Botham] ]

He presented some of his new roses to the Governor of Victoria, the Earl of Hopetoun, in 1889, and named one of them after him. The Earl of Hopetoun rose was later to be the cause of some controversy. In The Australasian, December 1, 1894, Mr Johnson wrote from Rose-villa, Como-parade, Mentone, that ‘the rose sent out by someone, and is now causing so much disappointment, is not the Earl of Hopetoun that I raised and obtained His Excellency’s permission to name as above in 1889.’
J. Burton, Woodrow Nursery, Heidelberg, claimed that he had named one of his roses the Earl of Hopetoun, and he was ‘surprised and pained to have my honour questioned by Mr T. Johnson of Mentone.’ [8]

1895, June 8., page 13. The Leader, [ From Rose Growing during the Land Boom in Mentone, by Helen Botham]
Undaunted, Johnson included Earl of Hopetoun in his catalogue of new seedling roses of his own raising for 1895. [9].
© 2025 HelpMeFind.com