28 November 2010

The mysterious origin of Mr Doncaster's Rose


Rosa "Doncasteri" is a particularly good form of Rosa macrophylla, the big hip rose.

Graham Stuart Thomas (one of the all time great rosarians) gives the origin of this rose as follows:

"A form of Rosa macrophylla put on the market between the wars by Mr Doncaster of Messrs J. Burrell and Co. of Cambridge, but probably one of Dr Hurst's seedlings. It has narrower, darker green leaves than the type, and smaller darker flowers and a less free and graceful habit. Its chief glory is the sumptuous display of large red, flagon-shaped hips in early autumn." - The Graham Stuart Thomas Rose Book (1994).

Graham Stuart Thomas studied in the University Botanical Garden in Cambridge and therefore knew Dr C.C. Hurst (1870-1947) the rose geneticist with close connections to Cambridge. When he ascribes this rose to Dr Hurst he is likely right. That Hurst worked on this plant is beyond doubt because he published chromosome details (diploid, 2n=14) in his "The Mechanism of Creative Evolution" of 1932.

But what is Rosa "Doncasteri" and how did it arise? Probably the best guess is that it is a hybrid between R. macrophylla and some other, unknown, diploid species, and it is sometimes written as Rosa x doncasteri to indicate that fact. Whatever the origin, the hips and dark flowers make it an excellent garden plant.

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