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'Mrs. Charles Lamplough' rose References
Book  (Apr 1993)  Page(s) 394.  
 
Hybrid Tea, light yellow, 1920, 'Frau Karl Druschki' x Seedling; McGredy. Flowers pale lemon-yellow, double, very large; fragrant; vigorous growth. Gold Medal, National Rose Society of Great Britain (now Royal National Rose Society), 1919
Book  (Apr 1993)  Page(s) 394.  
 
Mrs. Charles Lamplough Hybrid Tea, pale lemon-yellow, 1920, 'Frau Karl Druschki' x Seedling; McGredy. Description.
Book  (1971)  Page(s) 152.  
 
Mrs. Charles Lamplough Enormous white hybrid tea; it was in the background of many of the early McGredy roses, notably 'McGredy's Yellow'.
Book  (1959)  Page(s) 71.  
 
Sam McGredy. In Search of New Roses. ....the foliage was long and pointed, rather like 'Mrs. Chas. Lamplough'.
Website/Catalog  (1947)  Page(s) 30.  
 
'Edith Krause' ..... not as full as 'Mrs. C. Lamplough', and less liable to ball in wet weather. 
Book  (1940)  Page(s) 32.  
 
H. R. Darlington.  Notes on Roses and Their Perfume.
‘Frau Karl Druschki’, ‘Mrs. Charles Lamplough’ and 'Edith Krause' give us lovely Roses, but are deficient in perfume.
Book  (1939)  Page(s) 36.  
 
Frank Moore, Rose Echoes From the Homeland.
Mrs. Charles Lamplough has probably won a good many medals for the "best bloom in the show," and so long as you protect her from fun and games, which the English weather likes to play, she is a reliable Rose.
Website/Catalog  (1938)  Page(s) 33.  
 
Bush Roses
Mrs. Charles Lamplough (Hybrid Tea)... Lemon. A huge flower of best exhibition type. Good habit. Faint perfumed. Introduced 1920.
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 51.  
 
H. W. Stansfeld, Camperdown, Victoria. Roses in England, 1935.
...and Mrs. C. Lamplough which grows to perfection under glass.
Magazine  (1936)  Page(s) 125.  Includes photo(s).
 
Mrs. Charles Lamplough
Same photo: 1934, p. 89; 1935 Spring issue, p. 93; 1937, p. 124; 1938, p. 126; 1939, p. 124 (cut-out)
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