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'Madame Isaac Pereire' rose References
Website/Catalog  (1922)  Page(s) 40.  
 
Bourbon Roses and their Hybrids.
These are mostly suitable to grow as Pillar Roses, and the majority in this section are good Autumnals, and require little pruning.
Madame Isaac Pereire, vivid carmine; best in autumn. Vigorous habit of growth.
Book  (1921)  Page(s) 94.  
 
Pillar Roses
I give a list, necessarily a very inadequate one, of climbing roses of special merit for pillars.
Madame Isaac Perrière. Bourbon. Carmine. Very full, and large.
Website/Catalog  (1914)  Page(s) 12.  
 
Hybrid Perpetual Roses.
Madame Isaac Pereire, Margottin, 1880, very vigorous. Vivid carmine; large, full; good autumnal.
Website/Catalog  (1913)  Page(s) 82.  
 
Bourbon Roses.
Madame Isaac Pereire
The blossoms of this Rose are vivid carmine, permanently fixed, and are deliciously sweet. The flowers are large, full and double, and have all of the admirable qualities of the Bourbon group. The plant is of vigorous growth and blooms freely. It is a good pillar Rose and proves entirely satisfactory at all seasons. It is admirably adapted for planting at the base of a pergola, where dense shade is not always desirable, or against small arches near the house, where its charmingly brilliant flowers and its delightful fragrance can be thoroughly enjoyed
Book  (May 1911)  Page(s) 101.  
 
"The Perfume of the Rose" By E. M. Holmes, FLS, FES
Since attempts will doubtless be made to imitate the perfume of the most popular scented roses, it may be of interest to direct attention to those in the several groups which are remarkable for their sweetness:
Of the Hybrid Perpetual or Damask rose group, the greatest favourite is, perhaps, General Jacqueminot [...] Victor Hugo is a similar rose, which flowers freely in the autumn. Other sweet-scented roses of this group are Alfred Colomb, Heinrich Schultheiss, Hugh Dickson, Lady Helen Stewart, Madame Victor Verdier, Oscar Cardel and Madame Isaac Pereire, Horace Vernet, Maurice Bernardin, Pierre Notting, Eugene Furst and Abel Carriere.
Magazine  (7 Jan 1911)  Page(s) 11.  
 
Answers to Correspondents.
Roses for August and September flowering — The following varieties are all sweetly fragrant and suitable to plant in your country cottage garden, where they would yield a fine display of bloom during the months of August and September: Climbers — Zepherin Drouhin, Hugh Dickson, Pink Rover, Grüss an Teplitz, Reine Marie Henriette, Noella Nabonnand, Sarah Bernhardt, J. B. Clark, Gloire de Dijon, Mme. Alfred Carrière, M. Desir and Johanna Sebus. Dwarf — Mrs. John Laing, Dupuy Jamain, General Jacqueminot, Mme. Victor Verdier, Dr. Andry, Mme. Abel Chatenay, General Macarthur, Mme. Isaac Pereire, Augustine Guinoisseau, Gustav Grunerwald, Mme. Jules Grolez, Pharisaer, Ulrich Brunner, Fisher Holmes, Louis van Houtte, Ella Gordon, Captain Hayward, Mme. Ravary, Dr. O'Donel Browne, Beauté Inconstante, La France, Laurent Carle, Marquise Litta, Richmond and Viscountess Folkestone.
Book  (1910)  
 
'Baron Ernest Leroy', qui lui valut une médaille du département [de Seine-Inférieure], en 1866, une fois cédé, fut mis au commerce sous le nom de 'Colonel de Sansal' ; la 'Rose Impératrice' devint 'Madame H. Jamain' ; la superbe Rose Ile-Bourbon, 'Le Bienheureux de La Salle' fut lancée dans le commerce sous le nom de 'Madame Isaac Pereire' ; enfin fâcheusement, d'autres variétés de Garçon figurent dans les catalogues avec un autre nom que le sien comme obtenteur. 
Booklet  (1899)  Page(s) 22.  
 
Bourbon Roses.
Mme Isaac Periere (climber) Margottin, 1880. S. G.  Vivid carmine, large and double, very free and vigorous.
Book  (1899)  Page(s) 111.  
 
Madame Isaac Pereire, Hybride de Bourbon, Garçon, 1881, carmin
Magazine  (22 Jan 1898)  Page(s) 70.  
 
Rose Mme. Isaac Pereire. -- From this beautiful Bourbon Rose I gathered the first week in December some very good blossoms. Although perhaps Roses have been exceptionally late this year, nevertheless at the time stated there were very few other varieties yielding buds. I should mention that the plants of Mme. I. Pereire were on their own roots. It becomes more clear to me each year that Roses on their own roots are the best to give a succession of flowers. The colour of the blossoms is vivid carmine, and the very vigorous growth and splendid foliage single it out as a most worthy variety to grow as a standard, for it makes a splendid head, a point never to be lost sight of when planting standard Roses. It is also very successful in pillar form or for massing. As it seeds freely one may reasonably expect some good offspring from a Rose that has already given us that superb variety, Mrs. Paul.
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