HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
ProfilePlants  BredPhotosComments 
Harison, George Folliott
HelpMeFind's future is in your hands - Please do not take this unique resource for granted.

Your support of HelpMeFind is urgently needed. HelpMeFind, like all websites, needs funding to survive. We have set a premium-membership yearly subscription amount as low as possible to make user-community funding viable.

We are grateful to the many members who have signed up so far, but the number of premium-membership members remains too small for us to sustain the current support and development level. If you value HelpMeFind and want to see it continue we need your support too.

Yearly membership is only $2.00 per month and adds a host of additional features, and numerous planned enhancements, to take full advantage of the power and convenience of HelpMeFind. Click here to start your premium membership..

We of course also welcome donations of any amount. Click here to make a donation. Donations of $24 or more receive a thank-you gift of a 1-year premium membership.

As far as we have come, we feel HelpMeFind is still in its infancy. With your support we have so much more to accomplish.

We do not have ANY photos of this Breeder!

If you have an appropriate photo, please share it with HelpMeFind - see the UPLOAD PHOTO button on the Photos tab.

Please do not upload someone else's photos without their permission. Thanks!

Rose Breeder  

Listing last updated on Wed Aug 2024
United States
George Folliott Harison (March 5, 1776 Hurst, Wokinghom Borough, Berkshire [?] - January 5, 1846 New York City)
An American lawyer living in Manhattan in the early 1800s.

[From Rose Letter, February 2013, p. 3:] Around 1830 on his family estate in then-rural Manhattan, a quiet lawyer, George Folliott Harison, kept a greenhouse where he bred a fully double, darkly yellow rose that came to be called ‘Harison’s Yellow’

[From EverybodyWiki:] George Folliott Harison (1776–1846) was an attorney in New York City. He never married and shared an office with his father and brother on Nassau Street. His father was Richard Harison, a prominent lawyer. Both George and his father were avid gardeners. George created a yellow rose known as "Harison's Yellow". It became commercially available in 1830. It grew on the Harison estate known as Mt. Sinai in present-day Chelsea, bordered by 8th and 9th Avenue, and 30th and 31st Streets. There were many commercial nurseries in the area...George Harison was interested in other plants besides roses, and bred the camellia Camellia japonica var. ‘Harrisoni’
 
© 2025 HelpMeFind.com