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'Yellow Noisette' rose References
Book  (2008)  Page(s) 34.  
 
Macarthur's nursery enterprise [Camden Park] thrived and his roses were widely distributed.....The Tea roses Smith's Yellow  and .... were part of a consignment from Veitch's  Nursery, brought out from England by Captain P. P. King in 1849
Book  (Jun 1992)  Page(s) 88.  
 
Smith's Yellow China ('Smithii', 'Jaune of Smith') Tea. Smith, 1834. Parentage: 'Blush Noisette' x 'Parks' Yellow Tea-Scented China'. [Author cites information from different sources.]
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 669.  
 
Smith's Yellow or Smithii (tea) Smith 1834; sulphur-yellow, large, double, globular, growth 7/10
Book  (1922)  Page(s) 178, 186.  
 
Official List of Roses Introduced in America
Compiled by Charles E. F. Gersdorff
LUTEA, Noisette.* (Buist, ___.) Syn., R. smithii.

ROSA SMITHII, Tea* (Smith, 1834.) Syn., Smith's Yellow.

*varieties no longer in commerce are marked with *
Book  (1920)  Page(s) 177.  
 
A List of Roses Introduced in America
Compiled by Charles E. F. Gersdorff
LUTEA, Noisette. (Buist, ___.) Syn., R. smithii.
Book  (1919)  Page(s) 141.  
 
A Partial List of Roses Introduced in America
Compiled by Charles E. F. Gersdorff
LUTEA, Noisette. (Buist, ___.) Syn., R. smithii.
Book  (1902)  Page(s) 81.  
 
Thé. 1982. Smith's yellow (Smith 1834), jaune
Book  (1899)  Page(s) 162.  
 
Smith's yellow, thé, Smith, 1834, jaune, ou Smithii
Magazine  (12 Sep 1896)  Page(s) 205.  
 
Rose Homere.—"Dorset's" just and well-deserved estimate of the many merits of this Rose (p. 155) was specially welcome to me. He is quite right about its forming a fine bush or mass anywhere. But as to Homere covering low walls, it will speedily do that and ask for more, and I have not yet met with any wall too lofty for Homere to climb and clothe with beauty to its highest summit. As to its perfect autumn buds, they are admirable for button-boles or any other purpose. It is also refreshing to find such testimony as "Dorset's" as to Homere being seldom out of bloom under glass, and that no kind gives more satisfaction for cutting. Most of us are familiar with its profuse blooming in the autumn in the open, but few seem to have had sense to give Homere a glasshouse to itself, like the Marechal, Perle des Jardins, Perle de Lyon, Mme. Hoste, Marie Van Houtte, Niphetos, &c. Of very few of these, unless the last and Smith's yellow China, now almost out of cultivation, can it be truly said that they are seldom out of bloom.—D. T. F.
Website/Catalog  (1893)  Page(s) 27.  
 
Roses-thé....Smithii (Smith 34) = Smith's Yellow : Fl. jaune soufre, gr., pl., globul., tr. odor. Arb. moy., florif.
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