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'Béranger' rose Reviews & Comments
Discussion id : 124-058
most recent 26 NOV 20 HIDE POSTS
 
Initial post 26 NOV 20 by mballen
I found a mention of Bérenger on the web in a digitized (by Google) book, Chapel Hill (1996) by James Vickers, a history of the town (where I went to school) in North Carolina with an illustration (on p. 38) reproducing a page from from the Fall 1860, Spring 1861, rose catalog of Thomas Paxton, Florist. Bérenger is listed therein as a rosy lilac Hybrid Perpetual that occasionally repeated. The book relates that Paxton was an Englishman who arrived in North Carolina in 1851 as campus gardener and caused a scandal the following year by marrying the 15-year-old housemaid of the family in whose home he resided. Quote: His nursery,here advertised in the the last months of peace, clearly specialized in the roses that abounded in Chapel Hill and that would soon provide the raw material for R.B. Saunders' Blue Mass. End Quote.
R.B. Saunders was a local pharmacist who concocted a purgative used in the Civil War (and earlier), containing rose petals gathered by the ladies of Chapel Hill; honey; and mercury. Along what strange byways the search for lost roses leads.
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Reply #1 of 2 posted 26 NOV 20 by jedmar
Very interesting! we will add Thomas Paxton's listing to the References. Checking on Thomas Paxton, there is a letter of a Thomas Paxton on "The Improvement of Gardeners", dated January 16, 1852, published in "The Horticulturist and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste", 1852, p. 100-101. His address is given as Staten Island, N.Y. Another Thomas Paxton appears in the Ohio Horticultural Society from the 1865s onwards. Apparently not an uncommon name. Would be interesting to find out how Chapel Hill's Thomas Paxton fared.
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Reply #2 of 2 posted 26 NOV 20 by mballen
Not the same Paxton as the Duke of Devonshire's head gardener, Joseph Paxton, who imported the famous giant Victoria water lily to the duke's estate at Chatsworth. Joseph went on to design the famed 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition building (inspired by the structure of said lily pads) and received a knighthood. Truly, the 19th c. was the age of heroic individualism. Paxton must have been a name to conjure with -- for a gardener.
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