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'Caroline Marniesse' rose References
Website/Catalog  (1895)  Page(s) 3.  
 
Caroline Marniesse ($1.25 per dozen, $8.00 per 100), noisette.   Creamy white; flowers small and full and borne in very pretty clusters; an exceedingly free bloomer; low-growing (12-18 inches) and especially desirable for the border of a bed; about the most hardy of its class. 
Book  (1889)  Page(s) 150.  
 
Noisette Caroline Marniesse (Roeser 1848). Small, very double, white with light flesh-colour, in clusters of 30-40, fragrant. Vigorous. Very beautiful white rose. The form of the bloom reminds of Polyantha, very large clusters, floriferous.
Website/Catalog  (1889)  Page(s) 19.  
 
Caroline Marinesse - Creamy white, small sized flower, but very full and double.
Book  (1882)  Page(s) 6.  
 
Caroline Marniesse... Noisette. Roeser. 1848 Blanc crème. Fleur petite. Plante moyenne.
Website/Catalog  (1880)  Page(s) 257.  
 
Rosiers Noisettes (remontants)
1171. Caroline Marniesse. — Petite, pleine, bombée, blanc légèrement carné, teinté de rose.
Book  (1880)  Page(s) Annex, p. 25.  
 
noisette. CAROLINE MARNISSE (1848), flesh-white, medium size, full, globular, blooms very nice and rich in large clusters until frost
Website/Catalog  (1868)  Page(s) 63.  
 
Noisette Roses.
Price, 60 cents each except otherwise noted.  12 varieties, our choice, $6.
Caroline Marniesse.  White, tinged with flesh, small, double and perfect, and a most profuse and constant bloomer.
Book  (1866)  Page(s) 172-3.  
 
The distinctive characteristic of the true Noisette is blooming in clusters. Different varieties have different habits of growth, some being much more vigorous than others; but the greater part are true climbing roses. Those in which the blood of the Musk and China predominate are comparatively hardy. Many of them can be grown as bushes in the open air, with very little winter protection, even in the latitude of Boston. Two varieties- Madame Massot and Caroline Marniesse- are today (Oct. 16) in full bloom here, where they have stood for several years, with very little precaution to shelter them.

Madame Massot, sometimes sold by American nursery-men under the name of Mademoiselle Henriette, bears large clusters of small flowers of a waxy white, faintly tinged with flesh-color. It is one of the hardiest of the group. Caroline Marniesse somewhat resembles it, but is not equal in beauty.
Website/Catalog  (1859)  Page(s) 10.  
 
Noisette Roses.
Caroline Marniesse—Small flowers, in great profusion, rosy white.
Magazine  (Feb 1856)  Page(s) 59-60.  
 
"Roses for the South" by Robert Nelson, of Macon, Georgia.
Noisette Roses.
Caroline Marniesse.—This new rose, which ranks among the best roses in Europe, is, in spite of its beauty, not likely to be appreciated here in the South, where everybody goes for "size". In fact, "mighty big" is the description that is sure to enchant every person. It has a very peculiar appearance. True, the flower is quite small, not much more than an inch in diameter, with recurved petals; opening light pink, but soon changing to pure white. The flowers are produced in great profusion, and in large clusters, besides, it is a most constant bloomer. I hardly know a more suitable rose for a grave.
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