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"We may affirm absolutely that nothing great in the world has been accomplished without passion."
Friedrich Hegel, 1770-1831

Work Weekend at American Rose Center, Shreveport, LA, 2012 Feb. 18‏


Here are a few photos from this year work weekend.
Despite the rain, we accomplished a lot!
Thank you to all who volunteered.

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Planting Rose in Harlem for the Heritage Rose District of NYC- Season 3

« Our next planting day is October 22 - marking the beginning of our third season for the HRD.

Since October 2009, we have planted over 600 heritage roses in Harlem. At our most recent meeting with the Borough President's office, we decided this fall event would be a kick off of the “Season of 1000 Roses” - with a goal to add 1000 additional heritage roses to Harlem by April 2012. To date, we have over 25 different sites including community gardens, historical sites, and cultural institutions.

Here's a rough agenda for October 22, details will be sorted out very soon:

*At Trinity Church Cemetery, the Borough President would make opening remarks (we are returning to the site where the project started....returning to our roots...)
*As President of the Heritage Rose Foundation I'll speak of the mission of the project/give a brief update
*A rose will be handed off to a representative from the different planting sites
*There will be “soft” kick off of the walking tour (for cell phones), with a tour of some of the original sites. (full launch in Spring)

I'm planning to receive plants during the week prior to the 22nd and distribute them to all sites that will be included in the autumn planting. On October 22 we'll focus on Trinity Church Cemetery and The Church of the Intercession; the other sites (still to be finalized) will have their roses and can plant on this day as well, or whenever they are ready.

We have been in discussion with the following sites to be included in this planting and/or spring of 2012: The Grange (Hamilton's home), The Conservatory Gardens, and El Museo Del Barrio. 

The Heritage Rose Foundation is looking for donations of the following for our October 22 planting:

            *Roses - pre-1930 hybrids, varieties, and species
            *Funds to pay for roses
            *Funds to cover shipping costs of roses (some nurseries are willing to donate, but can't afford to ship)

            - (The Heritage Rose Foundation can accept $ donations that are designated for the Heritage Rose District of NYC)

            *Heirloom bulbs, perennials, and shrubs (camellias, small boxwood, species rhododendrons, etc)
            *Tools, gloves (especially children sizes)
            *Sweat equity......we need volunteers to point and plant and to plant on perfect point.

There are several sites on the Web to go to for more info, photos, and updates on the Heritage Rose Distirct: 

            *Facebook page for the Heritage Rose District
            *My facebook page
            *The website for the HRD
            *The website for the Heritage Rose Foundation.

Let me know if you are interested in becoming involved, please feel free to contact me with any further questions or suggestions. I look forward to hearing from you and hope to see many of you on the 22nd.

Thank You!!

For information, please contact Stephen Scanniello (President) at P. O. Box 831414, Richardson, TX 75083 or steprose@mac.com.

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Mystery Roses

Mystery Roses Around the World

A new book from the editors of Rosa Mundi and the Heritage Rose Foundation.

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Celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the HRF!

2011 Heritage Rose Foundation Conference at Chateau de Lacroix-Laval, Lyon, France

June 19, 20 & 21, 2011


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The Heritage Rose District was featured in the State of the Borough Address, presented this past Tuesday eve.. See page 11 of the annual report on the link below.  
Jacob Graff, a high school student from Dallas, is creating the smartphone ap/walking tour. More on this to follow.

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The 2011 Wyck Old Rose Symposium

Wyck Historic House and Garden in Germantown Presents
The Old Rose Symposium, Sponsored by the Heritage Rose Foundation

Saturday, May 21, 2011

2011 Wyck Rose Symposium Brochure (pdf)

2011 Wyck Rose Symposium Press Release (pdf)


For symposium registration information visit www.wyck.org or call 215-848-1690

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2011 Sacramento Historic Cemetery's Open Garden
Garden Tours, Roses for Sale, Silent Auction, History Tours
Also Featuring : Hamilton Square Perennial Garden and Native Plant Demonstration Garden

April 16, 2011 9:30 A.M—2:00 P.M.

For more information, visit http://www.cemeteryrose.org/Events/Events.html

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ABOUT THE HERITAGE ROSE FOUNDATION
HRFThe Heritage Rose Foundation is a nonprofit organization established in 1986, devoted to the preservation of old roses. Its mission is to preserve heritage roses and promote their culture; to establish gardens where these roses may be grown and displayed; to foster public knowledge and appreciation of heritage roses and their preservation.
For information, please contact Stephen Scanniello (President) at P. O. Box 831414, Richardson, TX 75083 or steprose@mac.com.
 

LOOK HERE! Thanks to everyone who helped us find our missing newsletters! Betty Vickers informs me that we now have copies of all.


See the archive of the HRF Newsletters



Noisette Roses

19th Century Charleston's Gift to the World


 The Charleston Horticultural Society is pleased to announce the release of Noisette Roses - 19th Century Charleston’s Gift to the World,  their first publication and what is believed to be the first publication on Noisette Roses in America. The Noisette Rose was named after Philippe Noisette who was the first Director of the Charleston Botanical Society in 1808. It was developed by John Champneys on his plantation south of Charleston, near Ravenel, South Carolina. 

Edited by Virginia Kean, a writer, editor and producer based in Redwood City, California, this full color, first edition softback publication is 86 pages in length and printed on acid free paper.  
The Charleston Horticultural Society is deeply grateful to the Heritage Rose Foundation for a grant to underwrite a portion of the printing
.

Purchase it Now!
Review of the Book in Rosa Mundi

LOOK HERE!
A Generous Gift of Books purchase
Barbara Worl’s legacy to the Heritage Rose Foundation

The editors of Rosa Mundi are privileged to announce a major gift to the HRF from Barbara Worl of Menlo Park, California. Barbara has been a supporter of the goals of HRF since its beginning and a mentor to many in the old rose movement for the past thirty years. Her decision to turn her legacy from Sweetbriar Press, her small publishing company devoted to educating old rose lovers, over to the hands of HRF comes as no surprise to those who have benefited from her encouragement and support and been inspired by her love of the old roses.

Remaining in Sweetbriar Press’ inventory are a large number of copies of three publications: a facsimile edition of Beauties of the Rose by Henry Curtis, A Portfolio of Rose Hips painted by Southern California artist Jessie-Chizu Baer, and Barbara’s reprint of the 1959 Roses of Yesterday and Today catalogue by Will Tillotson. Copies of all three publications will be available to order this summer on the HRF website. We encourage you all to express your thanks to Barbara by obtaining one of these valuable resources.

Books may be ordered from this website starting August, 2007.

Our apologies to readers of Rosa Mundi for my delay in providing this information for the HRF website. We are still organizing the transfer of these books and their installation in a dedicated storage for the Foundation. Your patience is appreciated.

-Gregg Lowery

Birthday Greetings to Barbara Worl    




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Passion Can Move Mountains! by Étienne Bouret

from Rosa Mundi vol. 1, see entire article

Jean Girin

     When Jules Gravereaux planted his first rose in the kitchen garden of his new property at l’Haÿ, just south of Paris, he did not know that just a few years later he would bring together all the known varieties of Rosa—more than 8,000 cultivars!
     The beginning of the nineteenth century was still a time of independent exploration, when an “amateur” could contribute to the body of scientific knowledge. But unlike botanists such as Crépin in Belgium who worked on herbaria, Gravereaux decided to collect living plants, initially by purchase, then by collecting during his study travels, exchanges with his correspondents abroad, and gifts from breeders and rosarians.
     With this collection, Gravereaux focused on the description and a new classification for the roses. To this end, he sorted the varieties, carefully labelled them in the garden, and created a single file in which he registered the synonyms and information about the habit, flowering, and hybridization experiments for each species or variety. In 1900, he published the first “Catalogue des roses cultivées a l’Haÿ” and in 1905 the “Manuel pour la description des rosiers.”
      To design the garden, Gravereaux asked Edouard André, an eminent landscape architect who worked with the Baron Haussmann and M. Alphand on the green spaces of Paris, to create a new style of garden devoted to just one plant: the Roseraie.














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