Leonard Dudley Braithwaite – crimson-red English rose
Step outside to soft Irish light and discover Leonard Dudley Braithwaite, an English shrub rose that brings rich, velvety crimson blooms and strong, lingering perfume to compact beds and front gardens. Bred by David Austin, it offers generous repeat flowering through our shorter summers, keeping your space cheerful from mid-season to autumn. Bushy, dark green foliage frames the old-fashioned rosette flowers, ideal for a romantic cottage feel along a Dublin terrace or country path. On its own roots it settles in steadily, building a reliable framework for a long garden life with simple seasonal care. Well suited to Irish conditions where good drainage matters after heavy rain and soil can be on the heavy side, it copes well once established. Over time you will see roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and full character by year three, with the bonus of scented cut flowers to bring indoors and enjoy in your everyday routine.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature shrub for small Irish cottage front gardens |
The bushy habit, deep crimson rosettes and dark foliage give instant old-world charm beside a low wall or path, while medium maintenance needs stay manageable for busy homeowners and beginners in a typical family setting, especially urban gardeners. |
| Romantic mixed border in a family back garden |
Reliable repeat flowering and good colour retention allow it to weave through perennials and grasses, adding structure from 115–160 cm high and providing scented highlights across the season, suiting nature-oriented households. |
| Lightly shaded city side-return or north-east aspect |
Its tolerance of partial shade means it still produces clusters of large, full blooms where sun is limited, so narrow Dublin plots or overlooked side paths gain colour and fragrance without demanding prime positions from space-conscious owners. |
| Own-root long-term specimen near a seating area |
As an own-root rose it forms a durable, regenerating framework rather than relying on short-lived grafts, so once established it offers decades of stable ornamental value beside a bench or patio for patient rose-lovers. |
| Rain-resilient planting on heavy Irish clay soils |
In gardens where wet winters and sudden downpours are common, it responds well to improved drainage and mulch, then repays the effort with steady growth and flowering, reassuring weather-aware gardeners. |
| Fragrant cut flowers from a home cutting patch |
Large, very double rosette blooms with a very strong, long-lasting scent are ideal for short-stemmed indoor vases, allowing you to harvest armfuls from summer into autumn and share them with fragrance enthusiasts. |
| Low hedge or boundary line in a family garden |
Planted at the recommended spacing for hedging, the dense, prickly framework and repeated flushes of deep red blooms create a visually rich, gently protective boundary that appeals to family-oriented gardeners. |
| Large container on a sheltered terrace or doorstep |
In a 40–50 litre pot with quality compost and regular watering, it becomes a statement shrub for renters or terrace homes, bringing colour and perfume to the door while keeping care tasks simple for busy beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve – Line a curved front path with this rose and soft perennials like threadleaf coreopsis for a loose, cottage feel – ideal for homeowners wanting welcoming colour.
- Crimson-focus – Place one specimen near a garden bench with pale paving and simple evergreens so its deep red blooms become the quiet focal point – suited to contemplative garden users.
- Heritage-mix – Combine in a mixed border with cherry laurel and traditional perennials in pastel tones to echo an old Irish country garden – for lovers of classic romance.
- Doorstep-glow – Grow in a large 50-litre pot by the front door with underplanting of low sedum to soften the base – perfect for city dwellers with limited soil.
- Family-screen – Plant a loose hedge along a play lawn, using its dense, thorny growth as a gentle visual screen while keeping blooms at viewing height – for families wanting beauty with purpose.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Leonard Dudley Braithwaite – English shrub rose from the English Rose Collection; registered as AUScrim, also known commercially as Leonard Dudley Braithwaite English Rose AUScrim. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom in 1988, from the cross ‘Mary Rose’ × ‘The Squire’; introduced and initially distributed by David Austin Roses after 1993. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit (1994, renewed 2012) for garden performance; American Rose Society rating 7.9, confirming solid reliability for general garden use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 115–160 cm high with a 100–155 cm spread; dense, dark green foliage with slight gloss; strongly thorned stems; weak self-cleaning, so deadheading improves appearance and repeat flowering. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, very full rosette blooms with 40+ petals, borne mostly in clusters; repeat flowers well with an especially abundant second flush under normal garden conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, velvety crimson-red with a purple tinge; buds dark maroon, opening rich crimson with near-black bases; good colour retention, sometimes shifting towards magenta under strong heat and sun. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strongly scented, long-lasting fragrance of classic old-rose type; generous scent output makes it highly suitable for planting close to paths, seating, and cutting for indoor enjoyment. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip set is normally low due to the many-petalled flowers; when present, occasional small, bottle-shaped red hips about 6–9 mm in diameter may appear in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b); black spot resistant with medium tolerance to powdery mildew and rust; needs regular watering in dry spells and some spring frost protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, mixed borders, cutting and specimen use; prefers fertile, well-drained soil with mulch on heavier clays; space 80–150 cm depending on use; maintenance level medium with occasional pest control. |
Leonard Dudley Braithwaite brings richly scented crimson blooms, repeat flowering and long-lived own-root reliability to your garden, a thoughtful choice if you would like lasting romance with manageable care.