Sam McGredy

Sam McGredy refers to 4 generations of Northern Irish rose hybridizers. Sam McGredy I founded the family nursery in 1880. Sam McGredy II focused the nursery on roses in 1895. Sam McGredy III took over in 1926, and was the first to name roses after family members. Sam McGredy IV moved operations to New Zealand in 1974 to escape The Troubles, and focused on Floribundas, Hybrid Teas and Grandifloras, including 'Paddy Stephens', 'New Zealand', and 'Kathryn McGredy'; and the hand-painted roses such as 'Regensberg'.[1]

Samuel McGredy I


Sam McGredy I (1828-1903) founded the family nursery, Samuel McGredy & Son, Nurserymen, in 1880, in Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland. He left a position as head gardener on an estate at the age of 50 to build the nursery business with his son, Sam McGredy II, who was a teenager at the time. The nursery initially specialized in fruit trees and show pansies, and benefited from excellent soil and easy rail transport to both Dublin and Belfast.[2]

Samuel McGredy II

'Mrs Herbert Stevens' 1910

Samuel McGredy II (1861-1926)turned the family nursery towards roses, which promised to be more profitable than pansies, and began hybridizing his own roses. He showed his roses in the National Rose Society show in London for the first time in 1905, and won the Gold Medal for 'Countess of Gosford'.[2]

Similarly to the British rose hybridizer Henry Bennett, McGredy II grew his parent plants in pots in heated greenhouses to give a longer season for seed ripening. He produced many Gold Medal winners and was dubbed 'The Irish Wizard' by other rosarians.[2]

Samuel McGredy III

'Picture' 1932

Samuel Davison McGredy III (1897-1934) took over the family nursery and rose hybridizing business on his father's death, and greatly expanded production of roses. He was the first in the family to name roses after family members, with 'Margaret McGredy', named after his mother. 'Margaret McGredy' was later used as one of the ancestors of the famous hybrid tea, 'Peace'. 'Mrs. Sam McGredy', named for his wife, was introduced in 1929, and was very popular.[2]

Along with roses, McGredy III also bred fox terriers, parakeets, and budgerigars.[2]

McGredy III died suddenly of a heart attack in November 1934, at the age of 38.[2]

Samuel McGredy IV

Samuel Darragh McGredy (born 1932) was only 2 years old when his father, McGredy III, died. A 4-person board of trustees, including his uncle and mother, took over management of the rose breeding and nursery until McGredy IV could assume management. Meanwhile, as was the usual practice at the time, young McGredy IV was sent away to boarding school at the age of 7.[2]

He attended Mercersburg Academy in Pennsylvania, USA, on an exchange scholarship in 1948, then Greenmount Agricultural College in 1949. From there he moved on to Reading University. After leaving Reading, he worked at a rhododendron nursery for one winter, and then reported for duty at the family nursery in Portadown in 1952, at which time he was handed the keys and told to take over.[2]

McGredy IV modernized operations after consulting with his professors at Reading and Greenmount, and with other rose hybridizers such as Kordes of Germany and Boerner of the USA. He introduced his first hybrid of his own, 'Salute', a cherry-red and yellow bicolor floribunda, in 1958. His first Gold Medal winner, 'Orangeade', a floribunda, was introduced the next year, in 1959.[2]

Sam McGredy IV married Maureen McCall in 1959. They had three daughters, Kathryn Mcgredy, Clodagh Leigh and Maria Winder.[2]

(Later on they had children of their own. Kathryn had Sophia Mcgredy and Oliver Mcgredy, Clodagh had Casey Mcgredy Leigh and Cameron Mcgredy Leigh, Maria had Christ Winder, Henry Winder and Jo Winder)

(He is a Grandfather of Talyor Hawcridge and Thor Hawcridge)

In 1972, McGredy IV and family emigrated to Auckland, New Zealand, where he set up shop as McGredy Roses International. The move allowed him to grow roses without the need for greenhouses, as was necessary in Northern Ireland; to better select roses that would do well in the USA, his major market; and to raise his family away from The Troubles plaguing his homeland. In New Zealand, Sam and Maureen had a third daughter, Clodagh. Sam and Maureen later divorced, and Sam remarried. His second wife, Jillian, worked with Sam in the rose hybridizing operation.[2] Sam McGredy IV has since retired and closed the nursery.[3]

Roses of Sam McGredy IV

'Trumpeter' 1977
'New Zealand' 1989
'Papageno' 1989
'Aperitif' 1998

In 1962 he introduced a rose named after the younger of his two sisters, 'Paddy McGredy', a rose-red rose that bloomed in bunches on long stems. In that same time period, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, Royal Patron of the Royal National Rose Society, gave McGredy IV permission to name a rose after her with the name 'Elizabeth of Glamis' - a great honor. This rose was introduced in 1963, a light salmon floribunda. McGredy IV's hand-painted rose series started in 1971, with the introduction of 'Picasso', a patterned red and white rose.[2]

Plant Breeders' Rights

Sam McGredy IV, along with fellow Ulsterman and rose hybridizer Pat Dickson, campaigned for passage of a Plant Breeders' Rights act in the UK, starting in 1955. At the time, anyone could propagate a new rose and sell it with no payment to the hybridizer. Rose hybridizers only made money on their creations for the year or two that they had a head start on their competitors. Most rose hybridizers owned a nursery for the propagation and sale of plants, which supported their hybridizing. The Plant Breeders' Rights Act was passed in 1964, allowing McGredy IV to secure rights to the climbing rose 'Handel'.[2]

The New Zealand Plant Varieties Act was passed in 1973, and the first New Zealand Plant Varieties Right was granted to Sam McGredy Roses International for 'Matangi', a floribunda, in 1976.[4]

Short List of Sam McGredy IV Roses

[5]

References

  1. Charles & Brigid Quest-Ritson, "The Royal Horticultural Society Encyclopedia of Roses", Dorling Kindersley 2003, p. 255
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Harkness, Jack Leigh (1985). The Makers of Heavenly Roses. London: Souvenir Press. p. 175. ISBN 0-285-62654-X.
  3. "McGredy Roses International". HelpMeFind Roses. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
  4. "History of Intellectual Property in New Zealand". New Zealand Intellectual Property Office. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
  5. "Roses of Samuel Darragh McGredy IV". HelpMeFind. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
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