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'Grenoble' rose References
Magazine  (Jul 1964)  Page(s) 3. trimester, p. 24.  
 
L'étude du parfum des roses par Neville F. Miller, spécialiste dans ce domaine, est fort intéressante mais très compliquée pour celui dont le vocabulaire chimique est assez pauvre même dans sa langue maternelle, je vais donc faire mon mieux pour me tirer de cette tâche avec le minimum d'erreurs. (American Rose Annual 1963) ...L'auteur a étudié 170 variétés sous différentes conditions atmosphériques et constaté l'existence de plus de 25 parfums élémentaires et de beaucoup de combinaisons de ceux-ci. Les plus fréquents sont : capucine, iris, violette, pomme, orange, citron, girofle, géranium. Un tableau groupe les 34 parfums principaux et composés, les variétés correspondantes étant rangées en conséquence...
Girofle
Suspense
Grenoble
Christopher Stone
Gr. Duchesse Charlotte
Website/Catalog  (1962)  Page(s) 18.  
 
VILLE DE GRENOBLE (Mallerin 1931). Ecarlate brillant. 

[no longer listed in 1975]
Book  (1958)  Page(s) 145.  
 
Grenoble (Ville de Grenoble). HT. (Mallerin, '27; int. C-P, '31.) Capt. F. Bald X Mme. Van de Voorde. Large (3½ in.), dbl. (30-40 petals), high centered, slightly fragrant (spicy), clear scarlet. Fol. thick. Very vig.
Website/Catalog  (1948)  Page(s) 49.  
 
Roses
Hybrid Tea and Everblooming
No. 1 grade...80¢ each
Grenoble—scarlet crimson
Website/Catalog  (1946)  Page(s) 25.  
 
VILLE DE GRENOBLE (Mallerin 1931). Fleur écarlate brillant, grande, pleine. 
Book  (1943)  
 
p25.  Mr. H. R. Darlington.  Crimson Roses.
M. Mallerin has described for us, in the "American Rose Annual," 1938, the 50 years long task he has imposed on himself to secure a fixed colour, and the beginning of his work, as exemplified in the series National Flower Guild (1927), Grenoble (1932) and Rouge Mallerin (1934)...

p30.  ibid.  
I have come to like Grenoble much better than I did when I first had it. The form of the flower is a little too cupped and only fair, and it is not continuous in flowering, but the colour is a good bright crimson which does not blue. It is fragrant and very free in flowering during its bursts of bloom, and the bed is then quite effective. It is, moreover, a good grower, decidedly better in this respect than Rouge Mallerin, and the foliage is healthy.
Website/Catalog  (1938)  Page(s) 10.  
 
Grenoble The plant is very vigorous and the blooms come on unusually long stems, making it one of the best garden Roses for cutting. The buds are crimson but the open flower is brilliant red, almost scarlet. It is fully double and of large size. Easily one of the best reds because of its dependability and uniform performance. Heavy grade 75c each. Medium grade 50c each.
Website/Catalog  (1938)  Page(s) 22.  
 
Bush Roses
Grenoble (Hybrid Tea)... Scarlet, large, good form. Vigorous and erect growth. A satisfactory sort. Fairly highly perfumed. Introduced 1932.
Magazine  (Oct 1937)  Page(s) 93.  
 
...voici une liste [de Nonin] brève des roses les plus en vogue actuellement, groupées pour constituer des massifs unicolores (H. signifie variété haute, B variété basse pour bordure)....
Rouge vif ; Etoile de Hollande (B), Coeur J. Gravereaux (B), La Maréchale Pétain (B), Hadley (H), Grenoble (H), Maréchal Lyautey (H).
Book  (1937)  Page(s) 74.  
 
Harry H. Hazlewood.  Some Better Roses 1930-1936
Grenoble: Named by its raiser after his home town. A splendid garden variety not receiving its full share of support.
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