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'Jenny Brown' rose References
Book  (19 Jan 2010)  
 
‘Jenny Brown’ HT, or, 1976, Parkes, Mrs M.H.; bud long, pointed; flowers salmon-pink, center paler, open, 4 in., 5 petals, intense fragrance; foliage glossy; very vigorous growth
[(Pink Favorite × Dorothy Peach) × Dainty Bess]
Introductions: Rumsey, 1974
Website/Catalog  (2005)  Page(s) 9.  
 
‘Jenny Brown’. Single soft salmon pink, fragrant, med.
Book  (1999)  Page(s) 35.  Includes photo(s).
 
‘Jenny Brown’, 1975. (Pink Favourite x Dorothy Peach) x Dainty Bess.
Large Flowered Bush rose. Long pointed bud. Single, fragrant, salmon pink flower paler to centre, orange-red to dusty red stamens, fully recurrent. Glossy, deep green foliage. Flower: 5 petals, 100 mm, 1 to 5. Bush: 1. 4 m x 1.2 m.
Book  (Dec 1998)  Page(s) 325-326.  Includes photo(s).
 
‘Jenny Brown’ Modern, large-flowered hybrid tea. Orange red/pink blend. Repeat flowering. This bright flowering bush originated from Australia and is not widely known around the world. The large and single, salmon-pink flowers start as long, pointed buds then open flat to show red and yellow stamens. The petals fade towards the center of the flowers and have similar undersides. There is a good fragrance that holds well. It is a vigorous, healthy medium-height bush with fair disease resistance, althrough it is susceptible to black spot and mildew if it is not properly maintained. Zones 5-11. Parkes (Australia) 1974 (‘Pink Favorite’ x ‘Dorothy Peach’) x ‘Dainty Bess’.
Website/Catalog  (1998)  Page(s) 4.  
 
‘Jenny Brown’ Hybrid Tea. 1974. Australia. Single, stamens prominent, fragrant, recurrent. 1.3m x 1.1m. orange pink.
Website/Catalog  (1997)  Page(s) 14.  
 
Roses by Mrs. Margeurite Parks of N.S.W. ‘Jenny Brown’ 1975 Hybrid Tea. Large, single dusky pink blooms with prominent stamens. Recurrent.
Book  (1997)  Page(s) 232.  
 
We have two of Marguerite Parkes’s roses in the Australian garden. ‘Jenny Brown’ was bred from ‘Dainty Bess’ x ‘Pink Favourite’. All rose growers know and love ‘Dainty Bess’, but all too often the bush is spindly and a “poor doer”. ‘Pink Favourite’, with the indefatigable ‘New Dawn’ in its breeding, must have lent it strength and stamina, for ‘Jenny Brown’ bears its single bright pink blooms steadily throughout the summer.
Book  (1996)  
 
p62 Australian Raised Roses Symnposium. Mrs. Dianne Ackland. ‘Jenny Brown’. Parkes, 1974. Lovely elegant perfumed salmon pink single blooms shading to a paler centre. In my garden it is a short growing rose, with healthy light green foliage.

p64 Australian Raised Roses Symnposium. Mr. Philip Sutherland. ‘Jenny Brown’. Anyone who loves ‘Dainty Bess’ will find this one hard to resist. The best single bush of Australian origin with superb stamens and salmon-pink colouring. A very fragrant Hyrbid Tea by Marguerite Parkes.
Book  (1996)  Page(s) 70.  
 
‘Jenny Brown’. Parkes, Australia, 1974. HT. Salmon/ivory. [available from] Golden Vale, Gretchen, Honeysuckle, Thomas, Trewallyn.
Newsletter  (1996)  Page(s) 15, Vol 5, No. 2.  
 
‘Jenny Brown’ HT. 1975 Mrs. M. H. Parkes.
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