Given on the recommendation of Committees to plants which are of great merit for exhibition
*Award made after trial.
Qualified for garden decoration
Trial held at The RHS Garden, Wisley, Surrey, UK..
Awarded by the Royal Horticultural Society in 1936. *AM(g) 1936; This plant earned the First Class Certificate (FCC).
Given on the recommendation of Committees to plants of outstanding excellence for exhibition.
Awarded by the Dutch "Koninklijke Algemeene Vereeniging voor Bloembollencultuur" (KAVB), or in English, the "Royal General Bulbgrowers' Association" from Haarlem, the Netherlands, in 1926. FCC Haarlem 1926; This plant earned the First Class Certificate (FCC).
Given on the recommendation of Committees to plants of outstanding excellence for exhibition
Qualified as a show flower.
Awarded by the Royal Horticultural Society in 1925. FCC(e) 1925; This plant earned the Award of Merit (AM).
Given on the recommendation of Committees to plants which are of great merit for exhibition.
Awarded by the Dutch "Koninklijke Algemeene Vereeniging voor Bloembollencultuur" (KAVB), or in English, the "Royal General Bulbgrowers' Association" from Haarlem, the Netherlands, in 1925. AM Haarlem 1925; This plant earned the Award of Merit (AM).
Given on the recommendation of Committees to plants which are of great merit for exhibition
Qualified as a show flower.
Awarded by the Royal Horticultural Society in 1915. AM(e) 1915;
Fl. 95-100 mm wide; perianth and other petaloid segments broadly ovate, blunt or somewhat truncate, glistening white, with creamy sulfur yellow at base, overlapping; the outer whorl spreading or a little inflexed, mucronate; the inner whorl of about the same length, less noticeably mucronate, a little inflexed, with margins incurling; three white segments at center shorter, strongly inflexed, with margins deeply incurled; corona segments very short, some interspersed among the petaloid segments, some clustered at center and almost continuous, orange, with a broad suffusion of scarlet-orange at rim, frilled. Scented.
Named after the hybridizer’s daughter, Mary Copeland. This daffodil was registered one year after Mary’s birth.
Mary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Historic Image: Oregon Bulb Farms, USAMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: Drew Mc Farland, USAMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Historic Image: P. de Jager and Sons, the NetherlandsMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Historic Image: Barr Catalog, EnglandMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Historic Image: Albert F. Calvert, EnglandMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: Becky Fox Matthews, USAMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: Becky Fox Matthews, USAMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: Old House Gardens Heirloom Bulbs, USAMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: James L. Akers, EnglandMary Copeland, 4 W-O, William F.M. Copeland, England, 1913, England
Photo: Kirby Fong, USA