Reference specimenAccession  SKU-00850

Rosa laevigata

Cherokee Rose

At a glance
Hardiness
USDA Zones 7–9
Sun
Full Sun
Soil
Well-drained
Mature size
Height 8–15 Feet · Spread 10–15 Feet
Growth rate
Fast
Seasonality
Evergreen
Rosa laevigata
Rosa laevigata, Cherokee Rose at Woodlanders
A plant Woodlanders once offered on our catalogue

This variety is no actively in production in our propagation house and may not return to our catalogue. We maintain this page purely for reference and archival purposes. If you would like to grow this plant, tell us. Your interest helps guide what we bring back.

For a larger installation or commercial project, write hello@woodlanders.net.

We have discontinued the propagation of this plant due to extensive documentation of invasive growth across the southeast. This page serves as a reference.

In every thicket where she rambles, Rosa laevigata—the Cherokee Rose—carries the weight of a story larger than herself. Though her roots lie in the southern reaches of China, she has become so deeply embedded in the soil of the American South that few recall she is not native to it. Her legend, however, is wholly American.

Brought over by early traders in the 1700s, this rose quickly found favor in gardens and along the winding lanes of the rural South. But it was along the sorrowful route of the Trail of Tears that she came to embody something more than ornamental beauty. As Cherokee mothers grieved their lost children during the forced westward march, legend says their tears gave rise to white roses blooming along the path. Each blossom became a symbol of mourning, resilience, and enduring love. In 1916, Georgia named the Cherokee Rose its state flower—not for where she came from, but for what she came to mean.

With arching, vine-like canes and curved thorns, she climbs over trees, fences, and abandoned outbuildings alike. In April and May, her pure white, golden-centered blooms open wide—fragrant and nearly four inches across, like open hands in prayer. In late summer, her hips ripen red and bristled, as if marking time in fruit.

But be warned: beauty unbounded can become unchecked. In the right conditions—and especially in the mild winters of the Deep South—this rose will run wild, claiming hedgerows, pastures, and native thickets alike. Her vigor is no small thing. Plant her where she may be given space and watchful stewardship, lest her roots outgrow their welcome.

She is at once a memorial and a caution—an emblem of sorrow and survival, yes, but also a reminder: even the loveliest stories can cast long shadows.

Flower, Fruit & Foliage

white