Olive Fitzhardinge

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'Warrawee' 1932, a pink hybrid tea with good scent, flowering all season. Photographed in autumn at the State Rose Garden, Werribee Park, Victoria.
'Lady Edgeworth David' 1939, Fitzhardinge's palest pink hybrid tea named after her friend and Warrawee neighbour. Photographed at Maddingley Park, Victoria.
Elegant detail: thorns and leaves of 'Lady Edgeworth David'.
'Prudence' 1938. Ever-flowering climber named after Fitzhardinge's second daughter. Damask scent.
Elegant detail: thorns and leaves of 'Prudence', 1938.
'Lubra' 1938; classic hybrid tea shape, red-black on the inside, crimson reverse, superb scent: the height of 1930s chic. In the Centenary Rose Garden at Morwell, Victoria.

Olive Fitzhardinge (1881–1956) was an Australian rose breeder, the first to patent her work. Her four surviving roses are held in Australian collections.[1] Her roses were well received in the 1930s but after the Second World War favoured styles of roses changed significantly.

Rose breeding

References

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