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'Orange Everglow' rose References
Book  (1958)  Page(s) 282.  
 
Orange Everglow. Climber. (Brownell, '42.) Copper Glow sport. Description. Pl. Pat. 505.
Book  (1948)  Page(s) 56.  
 
K. P. Jones, Barrington, Rhode Island. Wichuraiana Hybrids.
Orange Everglow will sometimes repeat but it is usually only a much more vigorous ’Copper Glow’.
Magazine  (May 1944)  Page(s) vol 5, no. 9, pp 185-186.  
 
What is an "Everblooming" Climber? by The Brownells, Little Compton, Rhode Island

While the rose hybridizer cannot successfully combine the true reblooming quality with the ordinary cane-growth of climbers, very satisfactory types may be produced by encouraging the vigorous branching growth of the flowering stems. An illustration of this is the variety Orange Everglow in which these two types of blooming habit are present and segregated. Certain confirmation lies in the fact that if the once-blooming cane-growth is not removed it may by its vigor smother and prevent the establishment of reblooming wood.
Article (magazine)  (1942)  Page(s) 80.  
 
New Climber by Brownell 
A new climber which will be introduced by Walter D. Brownell this fall and which promises to give us another important ever-bloomer is Orange Everglow, an everblooming sport of Copper Glow. This rose has a deeper color than New Dawn. It opens a deep orange, flashed with red. The blossom is exactly the same as those of Copper Glow so that those of you who attended Rose Day last June and noticed the blossoms on Copper Glow, which attracted much attention, will know what to expect from Orange Everglow. While it has not been tested over winter here, Copper Glow has been found to be easy to protect and therefore there is no reason to believe that the everblooming sport will not be sufficiently winter-hardy.
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