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'Baltimore Belle' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 64-910
most recent 8 JUN HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 8 JUN byCybeRose
Magazine of Horticulture, 10: 246-248 (July 1844)
Art. II. Descriptions of Mr. Feast's Seedling Rubifolia or Prairie Roses. By the Editor.
Baltimore Belle.—Flowers, white with blush centre, cupped, and very double; clusters, very large, often numbering thirty to forty flowers: foliage, large, pale green, having a rugose appearance on the surface; spines, strong and rather distant.
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Discussion id : 37-628
most recent 1 JUL 09 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 30 JUN 09 byMargaret Furness
I'm told that the rose grown in Australia as Baltimore Belle is the same as the photos of the one at Roses Loubert, but is different from the one grown in the US.
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Reply #1 of 5 posted 30 JUN 09 byPatricia Routley
Margaret, I've tried to find that photo of Loubert's, but not had any luck. Have you managed to find it? Do you have any photo's of the rose grown in Australia?
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Reply #2 of 5 posted 30 JUN 09 byjedmar
Here is the link:

http://www.rosesloubert.com/synstylaehort.htm
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Reply #4 of 5 posted 30 JUN 09 byCass
The Loubert rose is definitely not the rose we grow in the USA.
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Reply #3 of 5 posted 30 JUN 09 byMargaret Furness
I can photograph my plant when the gale stops but of course it's not flowering. In bloom it looked very much like a larger-flowered version of Felicite-Perpetue. (The comment on ID came from G and P.)
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Reply #5 of 5 posted 1 JUL 09 byPatricia Routley
Thank you Jedmar, Cass and Margaret. I now know exactly where to plant mine - on the fence and fairly near to the Felicite-Perpetue, which came from the creeks around Nannup, WA.
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Discussion id : 27-681
most recent 23 JUN 08 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 23 JUN 08 byDon H
According to the Thomas Jefferson Foundation it was William Prince and his son William Rogers Prince of Flushing, New York who hybridized Baltimore Belle. See

http://www.twinleaf.org/pdfs/2004/nursery.pdf
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