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Alister Clark - Australian Dictionary of Biography After Walter Clark was killed at Glenara on 18 March 1873, Alister and his brother and sisters were cared for by a kinsman, John Kerr Clark Alister was educated in Hobart, at Sydney Grammar School (1877-78) and later at Loretto School in Scotland under the care of relatives
Alister Clark : Australian who Loved Roses and Horses Survived by his wife, Alister Clark died at Glenara on 20th January 1949 and was buried in Bulla cemetery, leaving his estate valued for probate at £22,073 His rose garden at Glenara survived
Glenara Estate – The Clark family’s home for over 100 years Glenara, Bulla is of historical significance for its long associations with the Clark family and the pastoral industry It is of particular historical significance for its associations with Alister Clark, one of Australia’s best known horticulturalists and rosarians
10 GLENARA DRIVE BULLA, HUME CITY - vhd. heritagecouncil. vic. gov. au Glenara, Bulla is of scientific (horticultural) as the site of Alister Clark's extensive plant breeding programmes in the early twentieth century The garden retains a large number of his plants, including daffodils and mature specimens of many roses
Photograph, Glenara Homestead 'Glenara' is the homestead, which is situated in the Deep Creek valley at Bulla It was the home of Walter Clark, who moved from NSW to Victoria in 1853 and purchased land on the banks of Deep Creek
Glenara House Garden - Heritage Glenara, a pastoral property developed by Walter Clark from the mid-1850s, with a house erected to the design of architects Purchas and Swyer in 1857, extended during his son Alister's ownership by the addition of a billiard room and the garden modified to cater for his burgeoning interest in roses and bulbs, and maintained largely intact since
Alister Clark | Monument Australia As the family fortunes rose, he became a gentleman of many talents and interests and began to breed roses at Glenara, near Bulla, north of Melbourne, for the hot dry conditions found in Australia He released 122 new varieties between 1912 and his death in 1949