PRIDE OF ENGLAND – red hybrid tea rose – Harkness
For compact Irish gardens that crave a touch of ceremony, PRIDE OF ENGLAND brings velvety red blooms and a quietly joyful ambience. Its high-centred, exhibition-style flowers look as if they belong on a showbench, yet the shrub itself remains manageable and easy to place in a front garden border or beside a cottage gate. Own-root plants settle steadily, building a dependable framework for years of blooms with only moderate maintenance. You gain a refined, light fragrance and long-stemmed flowers ideal for cutting, while its upright, leafy growth gives structure even between flushes. In typical Irish conditions – with frequent rain and heavier soils – it performs best where drainage is gently improved, calmly handling cool summers and showers after a short outdoor walk when you feel soft raindrops and breathe in the fresh greenery. With time, a half-year-old plant expands from strengthening roots in year one to taller, more confident shoots in year two, reaching full, satisfying ornamental presence by year three.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The tall, upright habit and formal, high-centred blooms make a natural “welcome” at a Dublin terrace doorway or cottage path junction, giving a single, elegant statement without demanding expert care – ideal for the busy urban flower-lover homeowner |
| Cutting patch in a family garden |
Long, straight stems and classic hybrid tea form provide dependable flowers for the vase, so you can snip a few scarlet blooms after work without stripping the plant, turning a small back garden into a personal cutting corner – perfect for the relaxed, fragrance-curious beginner |
| Mixed cottage-style border |
Planted among chives, dwarf heuchera and low sedums, the deep red flowers rise through soft foliage for a “girly” cottage look; own-root stamina helps the plant recover from Atlantic breezes and winter wet for long-term reliability – reassuring for nature-minded gardeners |
| Low informal hedge |
Spacing at about 40 cm allows a loose, rosy line along paths or driveways; the dense, dark green foliage knits together and the repeat flowering adds colour through much of the season with only occasional deadheading – suited to orderly yet time-poor families |
| Feature plant in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, its upright form and restrained spread give a refined presence on patios or balconies; own-root plants maintain shape and can be rejuvenated by pruning if winter or wind takes its toll – helpful for space-limited city-dwellers |
| Season-long colour anchor |
Remontant flowering with a strong second flush keeps rich red colour returning through shorter Irish summers, anchoring the border even when other plants pause; moderate disease resistance pairs well with basic, regular care – attractive to relaxed, practical owners |
| Part-shade corner brightener |
This variety tolerates partial shade, so it copes with light levels common between houses or near walls; in such spots the velvety petals hold their colour beautifully, giving depth and warmth where many roses would sulk – useful for problem-area planters |
| Long-term structural planting |
Own-root growth builds a solid framework that can live and flower for many years, regenerating from the base after hard pruning; after the first year’s root-building and second year’s shoot growth, you can expect stable, mature impact by year three – ideal for forward-looking buyers |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Romance – Thread PRIDE OF ENGLAND through soft pinks, chives and dwarf heuchera for a relaxed Irish cottage feel – for dreamers who like gentle colour with classic form
- Terrace Welcome – Place a single plant by a front gate or steps as a scarlet focal point, underplanted with sedum for easy care – for city residents wanting instant presence
- Patio Feature Pot – Grow it in a 40–50 litre container with airy grasses to frame the blooms and simplify maintenance – for renters and balcony gardeners
- Family Cutting Row – Line a sunny fence with evenly spaced plants to create a simple cutting strip that still looks tidy – for households who enjoy home-grown bouquets
- Calm Red Border – Combine with dark green shrubs and pale perennials so the repeat-flowering red stands out without feeling fussy – for minimal-effort, structure-loving gardeners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as HARencore, marketed as Pride of England from the Harkness Masterpiece Collection, also listed by ARS under the exhibition name Pride of England. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Richard Harkness of R Harkness & Co Ltd in the United Kingdom, with unknown parentage; raised in 1997 and introduced commercially in 1998 for garden and exhibition use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated at European rose trials around 2000, including major awards at Belfast, Orléans and The Hague, where it gained multiple medals for flower quality and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bush reaching about 100–130 cm high and 55–75 cm wide, moderately thorny, with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage forming a strong vertical accent in borders or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, double flowers with 26–39 petals, high-centred and pointed in classic hybrid tea style, borne mainly singly on stems suitable for cutting and formal display arrangements. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep scarlet red blooms, RHS 46A–46B, opening from burgundy buds; colour holds well with only slight softening to cherry red in strong sun, maintaining a velvety, uniform appearance when fully open. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, delicately floral fragrance that lends a gentle perfume without overpowering nearby seating areas; scented enough for close appreciation but comfortable in compact, sheltered Irish gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
After flowering, it can set moderate numbers of small, spherical orange-red hips around 10–15 mm across, adding a discreet seasonal accent if spent blooms are not all removed. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, hardy to about −21 to −18 °C, with moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust; copes with heat if watered, but benefits from good air movement and routine Irish rose care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in fertile, well-drained soil with improved structure on heavy clay, spaced 45–70 cm depending on use; suitable for borders, specimens, hedging or large containers in sun to light partial shade. |
PRIDE OF ENGLAND offers classic red exhibition blooms, repeat flowering and a focused upright habit on a long-lived own-root shrub that rewards patient Irish gardeners seeking enduring structure and elegant colour.