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'Mrs. Marshall Field' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
18 MAR 24 by
odinthor
Does anyone have access to the Sunday, November 3, 1907, issue of a newspaper called (in full or in part, I don't know) the Tribune (likely the Chicago Tribune)? According to The Gardeners' Magazine of November 30, 1907, the Tribune on that date had a full page color picture of the rose 'Mrs. Marshall Field'.
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#1 of 3 posted
19 MAR 24 by
Lee H.
Here is the article. I can’t tell if it was in color or not. It was digitized in b/w.
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#2 of 3 posted
19 MAR 24 by
odinthor
Many thanks! Supposedly it's in color.
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#3 of 3 posted
19 MAR 24 by
Patricia Routley
I’ve moved the b/w out of Comments and into the main page for Mrs. Marshall Field.
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Initial post
18 MAR 24 by
odinthor
"Bright rosy pink flowers, with long leafy stems, and a fragrance equal to that of American Beauty are its principal characteristics," from American Florist, vol. 27, 1906, p. 737.
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#1 of 1 posted
18 MAR 24 by
Patricia Routley
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Initial post
18 MAR 24 by
odinthor
"The robust bush gives an abundance of flowers borne on a rigid stem, giving it preference for making bouquets. The color of the flower is deep pink within, paling lightly at the moment of fully opening" JR32/182 (Journal des Roses, 1908).
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#1 of 1 posted
18 MAR 24 by
Patricia Routley
Reference and colour added. Thank you.
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Initial post
18 MAR 24 by
odinthor
"Peter Reinberg will next season have seven houses planted to Mrs. Marshall Field roses. The additional room given this section has been taken from the new American Beauty range" [in the Reiner greenhouses], American Florist, vol. 28, 1907, p. 504.
Reinberg--a mass producer of cut roses with acres of greenhouses, one of the largest such operations in the world at the time, always adding more and more greenhouses--specialized (though not exclusively) in 'American Beauty'. As Reinberg was neither a rose breeder nor a nurseryman per se, I suspect strongly that 'Mrs. Marshall Field' was not a bred rose but rather a sport of 'American Beauty' (which is why Reinberg would feel moved to put the two under the same culture).
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