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'Turner's Crimson Rambler' rose References
Website/Catalog  (1960)  Page(s) 30.  
 
CRIMSON RAMBLER (Turner 1894). Petites fleurs cramoisi vif.
Book  (1958)  Page(s) 73.  
 
Crimson Rambler. R. (Imported from Japan as The Engineers Rose, the Chinese name being Shi Tz-mei or Ten Sisters, and the Japanese name Soukara-Ibara; int. Turner, 1893, as Turner's Crimson Rambler; int. Ellwanger & Barry, 1895.) Irregular, dbl., bright crimson, fading toward blue; large, pyramidal cluster. Fol. light, leathery, disposed to mildew. Very vig. cl. (15-24 ft.); profuse, non-recurrent bloom.
Article (misc)  (1950)  Page(s) 114.  
 
R. cathayensis is considered to be the ancestor of the 'Crimson Rambler'
Website/Catalog  (1946)  Page(s) 34.  
 
H. W. [Hybride de Wichuraiana]. —  CRIMSON RAMBLER (Turner 1894). Petites fleurs cramoisi vif bien doubles.
Website/Catalog  (1939)  Page(s) 85.  
 
Rosiers Polyantha sarmenteux non remontants. ... Crimson Rambler Fleur moyenne, pleine, coloris cramoisi vif. (Floraison durant très longtemps).
Website/Catalog  (1938)  Page(s) 53.  
 
Climbing Section
Crimson Rambler (Polyantha)... Crimson. Double. Produces large trusses. Subject to mildew. Introduced 1893.
Book  (1937)  Page(s) 68.  
 
Crimson Rambler Mult. (Tuerner 1894) ([pollen quality] 92%) [ploidy] 14
Magazine  (Dec 1936)  Page(s) 137.  
 
Crimson Rambler. L'auteur a laissé pour la fin cette variété extrêmement répandue, même trop répandue, qui, à mon avis, n'a d'autre valeur que celle de se développer énormément et très rapidement. Sa floraison de couleur rouge extrêmement vif, a pour les amateurs modernes de roses, une nuance trop commune.
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 139, 358, 596, 673, 717.  
 
p. 139: Cerisier, Rosier (multiflora) = Crimson Rambler

p. 358: Ibara (multiflora) in Japan before 1893; vivid crimson. = Crimson Rambler.

p. 596: Rambler, Crimson (multiflora) Turner 1894; R. multifl. X R. chinensis(?); vivid crimson, small to medium-size, semi-double, lasting, long upright clusters of 20-40, once-blooming, repeats occasionally, late-blooming, light green foliage, susceptible to mildew, growth 9/10, climbing, 3-5 m. - Prof. R. Smith sent her 1878 under the name The Engineer from Japan, where she is known as Soukara-Ibara i.e. Cheery-Rose, to England. Known in France aleady 1886 as R. platyphylla, identical to R. multiflora coccinea. In China: Shi Tz-mei, i.e. Ten Sisters. = Turner's Crimson Rambler. World rose. Sangerhausen

p. 673: Soukara-Ibara (multiflora) japanese Name for Crimson Rambler, i.e. Kirschrose.

p. 717: Turner's Crimson Rambler = Crimson Rambler.
Article (misc)  (1935)  Page(s) 102.  
 
The Climbing Polyantha, Red Explorer, a sport of 'Edith Cavell', is vigorous and you can almost always find a cluster of blooms on it. It is one of the rambler type that does not mildew, and I think replaces the old 'Crimson Rambler'.
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