CITY OF YORK® – white climbing rose - Tantau
Let CITY OF YORK® draw a veil of light across your garden, its pure white sprays catching every shower and gleam of Irish summer, while coping gracefully with breezy, rain-washed weather and our often heavy, moisture-holding soils in coastal areas. This tall yet well-behaved climber clothes walls, pergolas and pillars in glossy green foliage and dainty clusters of semi-double blooms, whose sweetly spicy fragrance drifts towards open windows on soft evenings. It flowers generously, with a spirited second flush that keeps your cottage-style spaces and terraced-house fronts feeling quietly cheerful for months rather than weeks. As an own-root rose it settles in reliably, building a long-lived framework that shrugs off the odd setback and rewards patient care as it moves from root-building to strong new shoots and finally a full curtain of blossom and hips by its third season.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| House wall or Dublin terraced façade |
Trained flat against masonry, City of York covers two storeys with airy white clusters without overwhelming a small frontage, giving a welcoming, “girly” cottage feel while leaving paths and doorways clear; ideal for fragrance-loving beginners and busy homeowners. |
| Pergola or garden arch |
Its long, flexible canes are easy to fan out along an arch or pergola, creating a pale, scented tunnel that stays softly lit even on cloudy days and offers a charming short walk under raindrops for romantic, nature-oriented gardeners. |
| Family seating area backdrop |
Grow it as a tall screen behind a bench or patio to filter views and wind with dense, mid‑green foliage and repeat white flowering, bringing tranquil structure and a long-lived framework for relaxed family evenings. |
| Small urban garden boundary |
On modest fences or wires it forms a slim, vertical curtain rather than a bulky hedge, saving precious floor space while adding privacy, scent and soft light, especially appreciated by busy urban residents. |
| Rose-and-perennial mixed border |
Clustered, semi-double blooms invite bees while leaving room for underplanting with daylilies and silvery Artemisias, giving a pollinator-friendly, low-fuss border that suits environmentally aware cottage-garden owners. |
| Training along a low fence or rail |
When tied horizontally, it flowers richly along the length of each stem, forming a repeat-blooming, easily maintained ribbon of white that copes well with typical Irish rainfall and damp air for practical, time-poor gardeners. |
| Large container on patio or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage it offers vertical impact and strong scent where soil is poor or paved over, while the own-root habit supports a longer-lived, more forgiving plant for container-focused urban growers. |
| Wildlife-friendly family corner |
Semi-double flowers give insects accessible pollen, then orange-red hips provide late-season colour and interest, all on a structure that matures steadily from rooting to full flowering over three seasons for patient, wildlife-minded families. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-porch veil – Drape City of York over a simple porch with a skirt of lavender and soft pink geraniums for a storybook entrance – suited to romantic cottage-style enthusiasts.
- Urban archway glow – Pair it on an arch with blue clematis for colour contrast and underplant with daylilies, bringing height and drama to compact city plots – ideal for design-aware balcony and patio owners.
- Soft-white screen – Train along horizontal wires as a living screen, with Japanese wormwood at the base for silver foliage, to filter neighbouring views gently – good for privacy-seeking family gardeners.
- Fragrant seating nook – Let it climb a pergola beside a small deck, adding pots of herbs below so scent layers around evening seating – perfect for those who relax outdoors after work.
- Wildlife corner frame – Combine City of York on a fence with ornamental grasses and nectar-rich perennials, then enjoy bees in summer and hips in autumn – appealing to nature-focused beginners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
City of York (City of York®), large-flowered climbing Floribunda; ARS exhibition name City of York; often listed as a rambler-type climber in the trade. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Mathias Tantau, Germany, from ‘Professor Gnau’ × ‘Dorothy Perkins’; breeding completed 1939, introduced 1945 by Rosen Tantau, unregistered cultivar used worldwide as a reliable climber. |
| Awards and recognition |
American Rose Society Gold Medal 1950 and Longwood Gardens Ten-Year Rose Trials “passed the test” rating, underlining its proven long-term garden performance and dependable climbing habit. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Strong climbing habit, typically 4.5–7.5 m high with 1.4–2.4 m spread; dense, mid‑green, glossy foliage, moderately thorny shoots, good self-cleaning, suited to walls, pillars and pergola training. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped clusters with 13–25 petals; small blooms 1–4 cm across borne freely in trusses; remontant with an abundant second flush when well fed and regularly deadheaded. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white petals with faint buttery-cream centre; buds creamy with greenish outer petals; colour holds well with minimal fading, maintaining a cool, luminous effect through the main flowering season. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, sweetly spicy scent typical of old-style climbers, noticeable in still air and around seating areas; ideal where fragrance is a priority, such as near doors, windows or frequently used paths. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of ellipsoid hips, 10–14 mm, orange-red when ripe; hips add fine-textured autumn interest and can support wildlife-friendly planting schemes in family gardens. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish Zone 4); black-spot resistant with medium susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust; appreciates good air movement and prompt leaf cleanup. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best with fertile, well-drained soil and sturdy support; tolerates partial shade and typical Irish wet spells; space 1.7–3 m apart; water in dry periods and mulch annually to stabilise moisture and feed. |
CITY OF YORK offers long-season white flowering, strong fragrance and dependable height on a long-lived own-root framework, making it a thoughtful choice for Irish gardeners seeking lasting character and gentle drama.