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'Lady Gowrie' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
8 APR 12 by
Eric Timewell
Your quote from the Oxford Companion about Lady Gowrie is correct, but misses some relevant detail. The Gowries were the vice-regal couple in South Australia, then New South Wales, finally in Canberra. Their period in office in NSW was 1935-1936. There was a convention, still current, that the Governor became Patron of the Rose Society of NSW and, in return, the Society named a rose after his wife. Olive Fitzhardinge had long been a member of the Society, so she provided the rose, thus called 'Lady Gowrie'. Alister Clark had already used her married name (not her title) for a rose: 'Zara Hore-Ruthven'. The same convention produced Riethmuller's 'Lady Woodward' in 1959.
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