JACQUELINE DU PRÉ™ – white bedding shrub rose – Harkness
Imagine your London front garden after rain, the air carrying a honey fragrance as ivory-white blooms open against glossy foliage on this celebrated Harkness shrub. JACQUELINE DU PRÉ™ has an easy, upright habit, repeat-flowering generously through summer into autumn with very little deadheading, as most blooms are neatly self-cleaning. Bred for robust health, it stands up well to the kind of persistent damp and fungal pressure common in British family gardens, so you spend more time enjoying it and less time spraying. Its open, single flowers invite bees and hoverflies, adding a gentle wildlife feel while still looking refined enough for a “girly” terraced-house frontage. Own-root production supports a long-lived, steady structure that can regenerate from the base, giving reliable shape even after hard winters. Plant once and watch it move from strong root establishment in year one, to confident shoot growth in year two, and then to full ornamental impact by year three. Whether you use it as a specimen in a small bed, in a generous 40–50 litre container, or as part of a rainwater-friendly planting, this rose offers enduring elegance and reassuring simplicity for busy urban gardeners.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small front garden focal point |
The upright, bushy shape and medium height create a clear vertical accent without overwhelming a narrow London terrace frontage. Clustered ivory blooms read well from the pavement, while self-cleaning flowers keep the plant looking composed for beginners. |
| Rainwater-friendly urban bed |
Deep-rooting own-root plants cope well with periodic wetness yet dislike waterlogging, suiting improved heavy clay where rainfall runs from pavements and paths. Their stable framework stays attractive as they mature, supporting long-term, low-input structure for sustainability-minded gardeners. |
| Pollinator strip by a path |
Open, single flowers with exposed stamens provide easy access to pollen and nectar from early summer onwards. The long flowering season offers regular forage for bees and hoverflies, adding subtle movement and life along paths for wildlife-lovers. |
| Low-maintenance family border |
Strong disease resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means less spraying and fewer gaps in flowering. The dense, glossy foliage helps suppress weeds once established, making this shrub a reliable, attractive backbone in busy family borders for time-poor owners. |
| Romantic “girly” front garden scheme |
Soft, creamy white petals with a faint blush at the centre pair beautifully with pinks, mauves and airy grasses. The refined flowers, dark foliage and graceful hips bring a feminine yet not fussy character to compact spaces for style-conscious gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, own-root plants build a durable woody base and renew from below if winter or pruning is severe. Long-season flowering and neat self-cleaning make it a rewarding choice where access and care time are limited for balcony owners. |
| Mixed hedge or loose boundary |
The medium-tall, bushy habit and dense foliage allow informal hedging at around shoulder height. Repeating white flowers and bright orange-red hips give interest well past summer, offering a soft visual screen around play spaces for family gardeners. |
| Cut flowers from a home garden |
Medium-sized, cup-shaped blooms on upright stems are easy to cut and arrange, bringing their honey-spiced scent indoors. Regular picking encourages further flowering without complex pruning, suiting relaxed, seasonal home arranging for home florists. |
Styling ideas
- Terrace-romantic – Underplant JACQUELINE DU PRÉ™ with soft pink hardy geraniums and Carex flacca ‘Blue Zinger’ for a light, feminine look – ideal for London terrace front gardens.
- Chalk-chic – Combine with lavender, nepeta and silvery Artemisia for a drought-tolerant, bee-friendly strip on free-draining, chalky soils – good for low-input, stylish borders.
- Rain-garden – Set behind a swale or gravel strip with sedges and moisture-tolerant perennials, allowing roof runoff to soak away while the rose provides height and flower – perfect for sustainable drainage schemes.
- Evening-path – Line a narrow path with these white shrubs and low-growing sage; pale blooms and fragrance catch the light and scent after work – suited to busy professionals.
- Patio-feature – Grow a single plant in a 50 litre container with trailing thyme and small grasses, placing it where fragrance and flowers can be enjoyed up close – great for compact courtyards.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
JACQUELINE DU PRÉ™ (HARwanna), shrub rose from the Masterpiece Collection®, registered as a Hybrid Spinosissima flowerbed shrub rose; ARS exhibition name ‘Jacqueline du Pré’. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jack Harkness, R Harkness & Co Ltd, United Kingdom, from ‘Radox Bouquet’ × ‘Maigold’; bred 1988, registered 1988 and introduced 1989 by R. Harkness & Co. Ltd. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (1994), confirming dependable garden performance, strong health and ornamental value under a wide range of typical UK growing conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub reaching about 130–170 cm high and 100–140 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage and strong prickliness; most spent blooms drop naturally, keeping the plant tidy. |
| Flower morphology |
Single, cup-shaped, cluster-flowered blooms with 5–12 petals, medium size around 4–7 cm, repeating well with a pronounced second flush that maintains decorative impact through summer and into early autumn. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Flowers open ivory-white with a hint of pink, then pure snow-white with slight cream shading; before fading they become delicately translucent, sometimes with yellowish edging under strong sun, colour holding well overall. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, honey-spiced fragrance that is clearly noticeable at close quarters and on still, humid days, contributing a refined scent presence without overwhelming nearby seating or small enclosed garden spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate numbers of spherical hips, around 12–18 mm in diameter, in a bright orange-red colour that extends the plant’s decorative season and may offer additional late-season wildlife interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Excellent resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7), tolerating UK winters well and coping with moderate heat or drought if watered during prolonged dry spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, borders, hedging and urban spaces; plant about 110–120 cm apart, in sun or light shade, in well-drained soil; low-maintenance, needing basic pruning and watering only in extended dry periods. |
JACQUELINE DU PRÉ™ offers long-season, fragrant, pollinator-friendly flower colour on a healthy, self-cleaning shrub that benefits from its own-root longevity, making it a thoughtful choice for enduring urban and family gardens.