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Shady Lady (World's Largest Rose Tree), Tombstone, Arizona
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Rose Tree Museum is home to the World's Largest Rose Tree. Each spring, Tombstone’s Rose Tree blooms for about six weeks in March and April. The town holds an annual Rose Festival in April to celebrate the blooming of the original Shady Lady, and rose lovers come from around the world to see the famous rose tree in all its splendor.
The story of the World’s Largest Rose Tree began in 1884 when, just one day after being married, a young miner named Henry Gee and his bride Mary left Scotland bound for Tombstone, Arizona. The couple lived at the Cochise boarding house until they were able to build a home, and a very homesick Mary became friends with Amelia Adamson, the woman who ran the boarding house for the Vizinia mining company.
In the spring of 1885, a large box arrived from Mary’s family in Scotland. Carefully packed inside the box, Mary found plants, bulbs and cuttings from the beautiful garden that she missed so much – heather, purple columbine, tulips, daffodils, and several rooted cuttings of the White Lady Banksia rose that she had planted as a child. As a token of the friendship so important to the young bride, Mary gave Amelia one of the cuttings. The two friends planted it near the woodshed in the back patio of the boarding house. Amazingly, the Scottish rose tree flourished in the Arizona desert.
By the time James and Ethel Macia purchased the hotel in 1920, the tree had grown quite large. Mr. Macia tore down the woodshed and devised a trellis system of wooden poles and metal pipes that could be expanded as the rose tree continued to grow. More importantly, the trellis created a shady patio that hotel guests would enjoy for years to come. The large rose tree continued to grow, and its enormity attracted a lot of attention. In 1933, John Hix was the first to call it the World’s Largest Rose Tree in his column “Strange As It Seems.”
The hotel was renamed The Rose Tree Inn in 1936. A year later, Robert Ripley arrived in Tombstone, stayed at the inn for a week, and was completely enthralled with the girth of the trunk and the tree’s enormity. Tombstone’s Rose Tree was made famous when it was included it in Robert Ripley’s widely syndicated column “Believe It or Not.” The World’s Largest Rose Tree is also listed in the Guinness Book of World Records, and its status has never been challenged.
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