- Source: Star Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle
Star Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle, is a horticultural products company, based in West Grove, Pennsylvania since 1855. The company introduced the Peace rose to America from Europe, and always specialized in rose production, but at one time, they were the leading Canna grower and hybridizer in the United States. Star Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle is best known for introducing the Knock Out Family of Roses and Drift Roses.
History
1725s: Ann (1677–1732) and Isaac (1665–1750) Jackson purchased the land for Harmony Grove Farm, where the company would eventually be situated.
1770s: John Jackson, grandson of Ann and Isaac Jackson, established a botanic garden on part of the land.
1850: Isaac Jackson, grandson of John Jackson, establishes Harmony Grove Nurseries on 30 acres of the original property with stock from nurseryman Thomas M. Harvey, in partnership with Charles Dingee, his sister Elizabeth's husband.
1855: Everard Conard (husband of Mary Jackson, sister of Isaac Jackson) formed the firm of Conard & Brother. He later purchased Harmony Grove Nurseries from Isaac Jackson.
1862: Conard started a nursery business with Charles Dingee under the name Dingee & Conard. The business had two greenhouses and the establishment was known as the Harmony Grove Nursery.
1867: Dingee & Conard began propagating roses under a new system introduced by Antoine Wintzer, the head nurseryman, and a world-class hybridiser. Conard conceived the idea of disposing of their rose stock through the mail. Their first catalog offered bedding plants, shrubbery, bulbs, seeds, and roses.
1888: Howard Preston sold his farm (a dairy farm and regional creamery) to S. Morris Jones, who continued to operate the creamery.
1892: Conard separated from Dingee and along with Antoine Wintzer joined with S. Morris Jones. The new company continued with the growing and distribution of roses and flowering plants. Much of the farmland acquired by Jones became part of Conard-Pyle, the house was eventually provided to the head nurseryman, Antoine Wintzer, as his residence.
1895: Antoine Wintzer worked on the improvement of the canna.
1897: The company's name became Conard & Jones Co.
1898: Robert Pyle joined the company and purchased control in it after Conard's death on December 15, 1906.
1930: After Antoine Wintzer died, he was succeeded by Sydney Hutton, of New Jersey, as head nurseryman.
1950: After Robert Pyle died, Sydney Hutton purchased Conard-Pyle. Three generations of Huttons have owned and operated the company ever since, living in the house at West Grove until 1997 when the house was sold to a private individual.
2012: The current owner Steven Hutton launched a new house brand, Star® Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle, with a new focus on royalties licensing and plant breeding.
Horticulturists
= Alfred Fellenberg Conard
=Alfred Fellenberg Conard (1835–1906) of West Grove, Pennsylvania, USA was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1835. He descended from German Quakers who were part of William Penn’s Colony in 1683. He worked on his father’s farm and learned the nursery business from Thomas M. Harvey.
= Charles Dingee
=Charles Dingee was a member of the Dingee seeds family.
= Antoine Wintzer
=Antoine "Leon" Wintzer was born in Alsace, France, emigrating to the USA at an early age, died at West Grove, PA in 1930. The head-nurseryman before becoming the company's Vice-President.
= S. Morris Jones
=S. Morris Jones, no more information available.
= Robert Pyle
=Robert Pyle rapidly developed the business with the popular sale of two-year-old field-grown rose plants on grafted roots, which brought higher prices and yielded plants that would bloom in the first year of purchase.
Pyle became an internationally known nurseryman and authority on roses, serving in leadership positions in the American Rose Society, the National Association of Plant Patent Owners, the American Association of Botanical Gardens and Arboretums, the American Horticultural Society, and other organizations.
One of the most famous roses of all time, the Peace rose, was introduced by Pyle patented in 1943 from the work of the French hybridizer Francis Meilland.
= Steve Hutton
=Steve Hutton is the current President/CEO of Star® Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle.
Hutton is a third-generation nurseryman.
Hutton is a past president of All America Rose Selections, president of the National Association of Plant Patent Owners, member of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s Gold Medal Award Committee, member of the board of the Wholesale Nursery Growers of America, and member of the International Plant Propagators' Society.
Cultivars created
= Cannas
=Roses bred by Conard & Jones Co.
Belle d'Orléans, Noisette 1902
Canadian Belle, Tea 1907
Climbing Mosella, Polyantha 1909
Eastern Gem, Tea 1905
Eugene Jardine, Noisette 1898
Henry Irving, Hybrid Perpetual 1903
Kaiserin Goldifolia, Hybrid Tea 1909
Little Gem, Polyantha 1898
Madame Bessemer, Hybrid Tea 1898
Palo Alto, Tea 1898
Peach Blossom, Tea 1898
Royal Cluster, Hybrid Multiflora 1899
References
= Notes
== Bibliography
=For Love of a Rose by Antonia Ridge, the story of the Peace rose.
External links
Conard-Pyle Company records, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware.
Conard-Pyle Company records supplement, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware.
The Conard-Pyle Co.
helpmefind.com
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Mawar
- Star Roses and Plants/Conard-Pyle
- Rosa 'Black Baccara'
- West Grove, Pennsylvania
- Alfred Conard
- Rosa 'Peace'
- Garden roses
- List of rose breeders
- Francis Meilland
- Pedro Dot