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'Glenara' rose References
Book  (1997)  Includes photo(s).
 
p94 It was my husband who suggested I go to see Tid Alston. Tid has a property at Oaklands Junction not far from Glenara.....Here was ‘Glenara’ called after his home, growing over two metres tall and covered, in late autumn, with semi-double vibrant pink blooms.

p226-227. Picture. ‘Glenara’

p251 ‘Glenara’ – Large bush or pillar rose. Released in 1951 after Clark’s death and named after his home. Large, semi-double, deep rosy-pink blooms. Constantly in flower. Still in Glenara and at the Alstons’ home.
Book  (1996)  Page(s) 57.  
 
Glenara. Clark. Australia. 1951. HT. Pink. [available from] Bleak, Cottage, Galore, Golden Vale, Hilltop, John’s World, Minirose, Mistydown, Nieuwesteeg, Otway, Rose Arbour.
Newsletter  (1995)  Page(s) 19. Vol 4, No. 3.  
 
Glenara. HT. 1951. Alister Clark.
Book  (1994)  Page(s) 120.  
 
Glenara Large bush or pillar rose. Released in 1951 after Clark's death and named after his home... deep rosy-pink blooms... Still at Glenara and at the Alstons' home.
Book  (Sep 1993)  Page(s) 194.  Includes photo(s).
 
Glenara Large-flowered Climber. Alister Clark 1951. Description... named for his Victorian home, 'Glenara'... traditionally grown on a pillar...
Book  (Apr 1993)  Page(s) 209.  
 
Glenara Hybrid Tea, deep rosy pink, 1951, Clark, A. Description.
Book  (1993)  Page(s) 50.  
 
Maurice A. Stratton, Glen Iris. Two Melbourne Rose Gardens – The Alister Clark: …..This part also contains a considerable number of Alister Clark roses including Glenara and....
Book  (1990)  
 
p9 For more than sixty years Alister Clark’s garden was at Glenara (pronounced Glenaira) which lies beside Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport in the village of Bulla. The National Gallery in Melbourne possesses a picture of the house painted in 1867 by Eugene von Guerard which shows the Clark family as children. That house had been built by Alister’s father, Walter. The garden, because of its associations, is possibly the most important in Australia.

p120. Glenara. Rosy p[ink]. 1952. (listed by T. G. Stewart)
Magazine  (1979)  Page(s) 5. Vol 1, No. 3.  
 
Glenara – 1951, intro NRSV. HT, bud long pointed, flower very large, semi-double, open, slightly fragrant, deep rosy pink. Foliage leathery. Very strong upright bush or pillar.
Book  (1952)  Page(s) 259.  
 
Glenara. HT. (Alister Clark; int. National Rose Society of Victoria ’51). Parentage unknown. Large, long pointed buds. Very large, semi-double blooms (deep rosy pink) with 15 to 20 petals, borne on long stems. Very vigorous. 6 to 8 feet.
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