Bibliography for “Charting A New Path—The Brownell Hybrid Teas” by Dan Russo in Rosa Mundi, vol 20-3.

 

 

Brownell, W. D. “Forty Years of Rose Research.” American Rose Annual, 38 (1953), 88–97.

Brownell Nursery catalogues (1941, 1950, 1959, 1966).

Chute, M. “Walter D. Brownell: An American Rose Breeder.” American Rose Magazine  (September 1998), 25–27.

Clancy, Rev. M. C. “A New Breeding Departure.” American Rose Annual, 40 (1955), 125–131.

Edwards, J. “Margaret Chase Smith.” American Rose Magazine (August 1992), 19–21.

Hamblin, S. F. “The Brownell Roses.” American Rose Magazine (July 1939), 66–67.

Hamblin, S. F. “Hybrid Tea-Hybrids.” American Rose Annual, 41 (1956), 141–146.

Jones, K. P. “Wichuraiana Hybrids.” American Rose Annual, 33 (1948), 55–57.

McFarland, J. Horace. The Rose in America. New York: Macmillan, 1923.

McFarland, J. Horace. Roses of the World in Color. 3rd ed. rev. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1947.

Mansfield, T. C. Roses in Colour and Cultivation. 2nd ed. London: Collins, 1946.

Modern Roses 8.

Pyle, R., J. Horace McFarland,  and G. A. Stevens. How to Grow Roses. 17th ed. New York: Macmillan, 1930.

Robinson, P. “The Forgotten Rose Heritage: The Rise and Fall of the Hybrid Tea Rose.” California’s Rose Heritage: Journal of the Heritage Rose Foundation (2005), 145–152.

Rockwell, F. F. and Grayson, Esther. The Rockwell’s Complete Book of Roses. New York: Doubleday, 1958.

Rosen, H. R. “Differences in Resistance to Spring Freezes in Rose Varieties.” American Rose Annual, 41(1956), 119–122.

Russo, D. “Rambler Roses of America.” California’s Rose Heritage: Journal of the Heritage Rose Foundation (2005), 129–137.

Scanniello, S. and T. Bayard. Roses of America. New York: Henry Holt, 1990.

Shepherd, R. History of the Rose. New York: Macmillan, 1954.

Skran, B. “Helen Hayes.” American Rose Annual, 78 (1993), 7.

Westcott, C. Anyone Can Grow Roses. 2nd ed. New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1954.

Wilson, H. Van Pelt. Climbing Roses. New York: M. Barrows, 1955.

 

 

BIO

 

Dan Russo is an historian who grows and knows Brownell roses of all types. His own main garden is in Little Compton, Rhode Island, former hometown of the Brownell Nursery. With the help of Brownell family members and concerned collectors, Dan has been involved for over a decade in an ongoing program to preserve these historically important roses. He strongly wishes to acknowledge and commend their dedicated rose conservation efforts