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'Rosa lutea var. hoggii D.Don' rose References
(1997)  
 
Harison's Yellow It is a tetraploid rose with 28 chromosomes. Pollen can be used from it or crosses can be made on to it successfully. In most cases, pollen is commonly used. Perhaps that is because germination of see from R. spinosissima and its hybrids can be difficult....Self-pollinated seedling rarely possess as deep of yellow flowers as its parent. And hybrid between other roses may be sterile.
Book  (1995)  Page(s) 155.  Includes photo(s).
Book  (Sep 1993)  Page(s) 210-211.  Includes photo(s).
 
Harison's Yellow (Rosa harisonii) Shrub. Parentage: R. spinosissima x R. foetida. Mr. Harison raised this rose in 1830 on his suburban estate on the Lower West Side of Manhattan. Description... it is covered in spring with cupped, soft yellow blooms...
Book  (Apr 1993)  Page(s) 234.  
 
Harison's Yellow Hybrid foetida bright yellow, yellow stamens, ('Harisonii'; R. x harisonii; R. lutea hoggii; R. foetida harisonii); Probably 'Persian Yellow' x R. spinosissima; ca. 1830.
Book  (Apr 1993)  Page(s) 297.  
 
[under the entry for 'Lady Baillie'] possibly one parent of 'Harison's Yellow'.
Book  (Feb 1993)  Page(s) 40-41.  Includes photo(s).
Book  (1993)  Page(s) 64.  Includes photo(s).
 
[Listed under "Wild Roses and Their Cultivars"] ('Harison's Yellow', Rosa x harisonii) This rose is said to have been carried westwards across America with the pioneers and planted wherever they stopped. Raised by George Folliott Harison, or possibly his father Richard; both were New York lawyers and keen gardeners in the early 19th century. (Rosa foetida x Rosa pimpinellifolia). Flowers in midsummer. Height: 7 ft.
Book  (1991)  Page(s) 13.  Includes photo(s).
 
Harison's Yellow brilliant sulphur-yellow... raised in New York in 1830. This is a hybrid of the Scots Brier with Rosa foetida, the so-called Austrian Brier... The supposition that [R. foetida] was in the parentage of Harison's rose is confirmed by its heavy smell, not the fresh fragrance of the Scots Brier...
Book  (Aug 1990)  Page(s) 51.  
 
'Harison's Yellow', often misnamed the Yellow Rose of Texas, is actually native to New York City, where it was discovered in the 1830s by George Harison on his farm in Manhattan... In the 1860s, homesteaders took cuttings of 'Harison's Yellow' west, planting them wherever they settled.
Article (magazine)  (1988)  Page(s) 64-65.  
 
With this explanation of the influence of R. foetida a conclusion can be made on the descent of the very old, yellow-blooming R. x harisonii via analysis of her pigments. ...The analysis shows a very high content of carotenoids with 100 mg%. These contain a total of 72% epoxydes, which clearly shows the influence of r. foetida in the origination of this hybrid, i.e. the analysis of the pigments makes a cross of R. pimpinellifolia with R. foetida highly probable.
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