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'Gloire de Châtillon' rose References
Book  (Dec 2000)  Page(s) 167.  
 
Gloire de Châtillon
Hybrid Perpetual
François Fontaine [père] 1861
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 148.  
 
Châtillon, Gloire de (HP) Fontaine 1861; vivid crimson, shaded violet, very large, double, growth 7/10, bushy, robust. = [similar to] Mme. Masson.
Magazine  (10 Jun 1911)  Page(s) 278.  
 
The Parentage of Roses.
The following list of the world's Roses and their parentage has been compiled by Mr. Robert Daniel, 38 Russell Road. Fishponds, Bristol, and by his kind permission we are enabled to publish it...
Gloire de Chatillon... Hybrid Perpetual, Fontaine, 1861, Sport Mme. Masson
Book  (1899)  Page(s) 72.  
 
Gloire de Chatillon, HR, Fontaine, 1862, cramoisi, syn. Mme Masson
Book  (1883)  Page(s) 147.  
 
...Mme. Masson = Gloire de Chatillon...
Book  (1880)  Page(s) Annex, p. 55.  
 
hybrid perpetual. Gloire de Châtillon (Fontaine, 1862), brilliant red, shaded violet, very large, double.
Magazine  (13 May 1875)  Page(s) 346.  
 
Synonymes (Teas), 1, Belle de Bordeaux, or Gloire de Bordeaux; 2, Bougère, or Clotilde; 3, Clara Sylvain, or Lady Warrender, or Madame Bureau; 4, Madame Maurin, or Adèle Pradel, or Madame Denis; 5, Madame Bravy, or Alba rosea; 6, Souvenir d'un Ami, or Queen Victoria; 7, Celine Forestier, or Liesis; 8, Le Pactole, or Madame de Challonge; 9, Madame Deslongchamps, or Adelaide Pavie; 10, Narcisse, or Enfant de Lyon; 11, Catherine Guillot, or Michel Bonnet; 12, Louise Odier, or Madame de Stella; 13, Modèle de Perfection, or Celine Gonod; 14, Augusts Mie, or Madame Rival; 15, Le Lion des Combats, or Beaute Francaise; 16, Louise Peyronny, or Laelia; 17, Madame Masson, or Gloire de Chatillon. These, in my opinion, should not have gone out; I will buy either on their own roots—say twenty plants. 18, Maurice Bernardin, or Exposition de Brie, or Ferdinand de Lesseps, or Auguste Neumann (I see no difference here); 19, Sénatéur Favre, or Puebla, or François Fontaine; 20, Sophie Coquerelle, or Julie de St. Aignant; 21, Virginal, or Madame Liabaud; 22, Madame Campbell d'Islay, or Triomphe de Valenciennes. —W. F. Radclyffe.
Website/Catalog  (1874)  Page(s) 31.  
 
Gloire de Chatillon  HP.  Crimson, shaded with velvety purple
Website/Catalog  (1865)  Page(s) 27.  
 
HP.  Gloire de Chatillon brilliant red, shaded with violet, large and full
Book  (1863)  Page(s) 163.  
 
Let me first bring under notice the novelties of 1861-62, of which we have some actual knowledge; and I state fearlessly, at the outset, that this was the richest freight of new Roses that ever reached our shores in a single year. I find, on reference to my note-book, that I bought sixty-two new kinds that year, fifty-six of which bloomed with me, and twenty-four of these I have marked as decided acquisitions.
Gloire de Chatillon is an expanded Rose, of immense size, and truly magnificent: the colours are the same as in Madame Masson—crimson and purple shaded. It has been said by some to be too near the latter to be desirable, but if it maintains the character it has acquired here it will certainly surpass that old favourite.
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