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'Miss Glegg' rose References
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 301.  
 
Glegg, Miss (noisette) Vibert 1835; white, center salmon, small, double, broad, in large clusters, short habit.
Book  (1933)  Page(s) 71.  
 
Mrs. Frederick L. Keays. The Bengal Roses.
Vibert also released a Noisette he named Miss Glegg, with small, full, white flowers of cupped form, their centers sometimes flesh-color, produced in large clusters, on a bush of dwarf growth, much in the style of 'Aimee Vibert', but with flowers smaller and more regularly formed.
Book  (1910)  Page(s) 335-337.  
 
Miss Glegg [Noisette]; flowers white, their centres sometimes flesh-colour, produced in large clusters, small and full; form cupped; growth dwarf. Much in the style of 'Aimée Vibert', but the flowers are smaller and more regularly formed. A pretty Rose. Raised by M. Vibert.
Website/Catalog  (1909)  Page(s) 85.  
 
Miss Clegg. A pretty variety in the way of 'Aimee Vibert', pure white, changing to rose.
Magazine  (26 Dec 1908)  Page(s) 634.  
 
Rose Miss Glegg.
Does anyone know the history of this Rose? I had it from Messrs. Rogers and Son, Red Lodge Nurseries, Southampton, but I cannot see it noted elsewhere. I call it a free-flowering, very fragrant, cluster Rose, which opens its flowers early in July. In colour the buds are blush white, changing to pure white with age. It gives clusters of twenty to thirty blooms on each shoot. I do not call it a climbing variety, as the growths made annually are not more than 4 feet long. The foliage is deep green and not evergreen. I grow and recommend it as a standard on the common Briar. F.M.
Book  (1906)  Page(s) 121.  
 
7.847.  Miss Glegg,  Noisette,  Vibert,  saumon
Magazine  (6 Jul 1905)  Page(s) 16.  
 
Messrs. Rogers and Son, Southampton, had an interesting group of Roses in pots, many single-flowered kinds, and also that charming but little-known pure white free-flowering variety Miss Glegg.
Magazine  (13 Dec 1902)  Page(s) 536.  
 
Many other old Noisettes I can recall, such as Caroline Marniesse, Jeanne d'Arc, La Biche, Mme. Massot, Miss Glegg, Triomphe de Rennes, etc., all of which seem to be fast disappearing.
Book  (1893)  
 
p169. As roses which are synonymous, or too much alike, as regards the form and color of the flowers, we note the following kinds: Noisette: 'Champney's Pink Cluster', 'Belle Marseillaise' and Miss Glegg

p287. Miss Glegg free. N. Vibert. White, the centre often flesh color, very small, double; resembles 'Aimee Vibert', but is much inferior.
Book  (1892)  Page(s) 127-8.  
 
Autumnal Roses ([reprinted] from "The Gardeners' Chronicle," 1863, p.461.)
The Noisette as we remember it originally, is not worthy of comparison in point of size with the modern kinds that have descended from it, enriched as they have been with a plentiful infusion of the blood of the Tea-Scented. There are only Aimée Vibert and Miss Glegg, white, and Fellenberg, crimson, of the old style of Noisettes (small flowers in large clusters) that we should consider worth recommending in the present state of Rose culture. [...]
Miss Glegg is a beautiful, pure white Rose, of dwarf growth, flowering abundantly and in clusters, and therefore well suited for planting in masses.
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