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Snowball Bush Viburnum

Viburnum opulus ‘roseum’

Known to Jefferson as "gelder rose" this Old World native viburnum is a hardy, deciduous, late spring-flowering variety with large, showy, spherical clusters of white or green-tinted white, sterile blossoms that sometimes turn pink and leaves that become purple-tinted in autumn.

AI generated image from an original Monticello photograph

In 1794, Thomas Jefferson included "gelder rose" in his "objects for the garden this year."1 On April 16, 1807, Jefferson further documented the planting of this shrub on the northeast and southeast shrub circles of Monticello Mountain.2 He also lists the "gelder rose" in his 1804 plans for a garden or pleasure grounds.3 Other common names include Whitsun-boss, Elder-rose, Guelder-rose, Love-roses, and Pincushion-tree.

This sterile (fruitless) garden form was known in Europe by 1554 and has been a garden favorite ever since.4 The flowers, described in 1770 as "balls of snow, lodged in a pleasing manner all over its head,"5 have inspired other common names such as Whitsun-boss, Love-roses, and Pincushion-tree. Bernard McMahon included "Viburnum opulus americanum Guelder Rose-leaved Viburnum," in his 1806 The American Gardener's Calendar.6

In Bloom at Monticello is made possible by support from The Richard D. and Carolyn W. Jacques Foundation.

Further Sources

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Footnotes

  1. Betts, Garden Book, 208.
  2. Ibid., 334.
  3. See the Coolidge Collection of Thomas Jefferson Manuscripts, Massachusetts Historical Society.
  4. Alice M. Coats, Garden Shrubs and Their Histories (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1992), 204.
  5. William Hanbury, A Complete Body of Planting and Gardening (London: Printed for the author and sold by Edward and Charles Dilly, 1770-71), 198.
  6. Bernard McMahon, The American Gardener's Calendar: 1806 (Charlottesville: Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation, 1997), 596; Denise Wiles Adams, Restoring American Gardens: An Encyclopedia of Heirloom Ornamental Plants, 1640-1940 (Portland, OR: Timber Press, Inc., 2004), 132.