Dickson Roses

{{Short description|Rose nursery in Northern Ireland}}

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File:Rosa 'Tom Wood'.jpg

File:Rosa Irish Elegance 2.jpg

File:Rosa Kathleen Harrop1UME.jpg

File:Rosa Grandpa Dickson (7376467376).jpg

File:Rosa-whisper.jpg

Dickson Nurseries is a family owned rose nursery, notable for some of the cultivars it developed, and based in Newtownards, County Down, Northern Ireland.{{cite web|title=Dickson Roses website|url=http://www.dickson-roses.co.uk |website=www.dickson-roses.co.uk|accessdate=14 June 2013}}

The firms

The nursery was founded by Alexander Dickson I (1801–1880) in 1836. His sons Hugh (c. 1831–1904) and George I (1832–1914) both became interested in roses. The firm became Alexander Dickson and Sons. A separate firm, Royal Nurseries, was founded by Hugh in 1869. With the help of George's sons Alexander II (20 December 1857 – 1949) and George II they started breeding roses in the late 1870s. The main firm later changed its name to Dicksons of Hawlmark and finally became Dickson Nurseries when it moved from Hawlmark to Milecross Road, Newtownards, in 1969.{{cite book |last1=Taylor |first1=Judith M. |title=Visions of Loveliness |year=2014 |publisher=Swallow Press |location=Athens, Ohio |isbn=978-0804011563 |pages=231–232}}

The BBC [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-northern-ireland-49362097/dickson-roses-faces-closure-after-180-years?intlink_from_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bbc.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fuk&link_location=live-reporting-map reported] that the business might close in 2019.

The breeders

Introducing themselves as breeders at the National Rose Society Show in London in 1886, the Dicksons exhibited two Hybrid Perpetuals and a Tea Rose ('Earl of Dufferin', 'Lady Helen Stewart' and 'Ethel Brownlow'). Later came cultivars like George I's famous pink Hybrid Tea 'Mrs. W.J. Grant' (1892) or his cherry red Hybrid Perpetual 'Tom Wood' (1896).{{cite book|last=Quest-Ritson|first=Charles & Brigid|title=Encyclopedia of roses|year=2011|publisher=Dorling-Kindersley|page=120|location=New York|isbn=9780756688684}}.

Alexander II worked for the nursery between 1872 and 1930. He became the most prolific of Dickson breeders (242 roses), most notably of the 'Irish' series of single Hybrid Teas issued between 1900 and 1914 (e.g. 'Irish Elegance' in 1905); of 'George Dickson (1912); of 'Kitchener of Khartoum' and 'Kootenay' (1917); of 'Kathleen Harrop' (1919); and of 'Dame Edith Helen'.{{cite web|url=http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=7.9894|title=Alexander Dickson II|work=Help Me Find Roses|accessdate=14 June 2013}}

Many rose names such as Hugh's 'Ulster Gem' (1917) — and the name Royal Nurseries itself – show that the family regarded itself as part of the United Kingdom, not of a separate Ireland.{{or?|date=June 2025}}

Alexander II was followed by his son, Alexander III (1893–15 October 1975), whose 57 named roses include 'Sir Winston Churchill' (1955), 'Red Devil' (1965) and 'Nana Mouskouri' (1975), though his career was inhibited by the Second World War.{{cite web|title=Alexander Dickson III|url=http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=7.11382|work=Help Me Find|accessdate=14 June 2013}}

From 1957 Alexander Patrick (1926–2012), called Patrick, bred 156 roses for the company, introducing varieties such as 'Sea Pearl' (1964), 'Grandpa Dickson' (1966), 'Redgold' (1967) and 'Elina' (1983).{{cite web|title=Patrick Dickson|url=http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=7.9855|work=Help Me Find|accessdate=14 June 2013}}

Since 1977 Colin Dickson (1956– ), rosarian of the sixth generation, has been the main rose breeder. Cultivars created include 'Beautiful Britain' (1983), 'Sweet Magic' (1996), 'Irish Eyes' (2000) and 'Whisper' (2002).{{cite web|url=http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=7.6904|title=Colin Dickson|work=Help Me Find|accessdate=14 June 2013}}

Awards

Many cultivars created by the Dickson family are known worldwide and were granted several rose awards. The following table shows a selection:

GM - Gold Medal; PIT - President's International Trophy (Great Britain)

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name!!Form!!Colour!!Date!!Awards!!Photo

|ElinaHybrid teapale yellow1984New Zealand Gold Star of the South Pacific 1987; World's Favourite 200640px
|FreedomHybrid Teayellow1984RNRS GM 1983; The Hague Gold Medal 199240px
|Kitchener of KhartoumHybrid Teared1917RNRS GM 191640px
|Red DevilHybrid Teared< 1965Japanese GM 1967; Belfast GM 1969; Portland GM 197045px
|Red PlanetHybrid Teared1970PIT & RNRS GM 196935px
|Grandpa DicksonHybrid Teayellow1966PIT & RNRS GM 1965; The Hague GM 1966; Belfast GM 1968; Portland GM 197045px
|BenitaFloribundayellow1944Dublin GM 1990; Breeder's Choice 199545px
|WhisperHybrid Teawhite2002All-America Rose Selection 200335px

See also

[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Roses_by_Dickson Roses by Dickson], rose photos sorted by breeder

References

{{Reflist}}

Literature

  • {{cite book|last=Quest-Ritson|first=Charles & Brigid|title=Encyclopedia of roses|year=2011|publisher=Dorling-Kindersley|location=New York|isbn=9780756688684}}. See especially page 120, "Dickson Roses".

Category:Rose breeders