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S L I In Memoriam
Ben Hager
We regret the loss of another or our fine iris hybridizers
from California with the death of Ben Hager in the first week
of May. Ben became interested in the Louisiana irises when
he first worked for Milliken Iris Gardens in Southern
California. They were one of the first large commercial
gardens to offer what was then a new type of irises. It was
here he met Sid DuBose, who had been a student in horticulture
at Louisiana State University and an early member of the
Society for Louisiana Irises. The two left Milliken in 1955 to
buy and operate Melrose Iris Gardens in Modesto, California.
Four years later they moved to Stockton, California.
Ben was known primarily as a hybridizer of bearded irises,
but worked with many different species and lately with
daylilies. Most iris growers identify him with his famous
award-winning pinks, VANITY and BEVERLY SILLS,
which make the tall bearded popularity poll each year.
Louisiana iris growers know him for his excellent dark purples,
FULL ECLIPSE (1977) and DARK TIDE (1981) and his
hardy reds, CAJUN COUNTRY (1985) and CAJUN
COOKERY (1989).
Ben’s encouragement influenced the work of Mary Dunn,
for whom he named an iris. This iris, MARY DUNN, won the
DeBaillon
Award in 1977. Much of the instant popularity of the
Chowning irises can be
credited to Hager, who
introduced them in the late
1970s with a full page
color picture of ANN
CHOWNING on the
cover of the Melrose
catalog. It was this type
of publicity for the Louisiana
irises that made Ben
one of our best promoters.
He was an off and on
member of the Society,
but came to several
meetings in Lafayette and
authored articles for the
Newsletter. His extensive
plantings of Louisiana
irises exposed them to
the hundreds of people who visited the Melrose garden.
I remember my first AIS convention after retiring in 1972,
not having attended a convention since 1960. Neither had
other representatives of Region 10 (Louisiana). At the
Welcome Dinner when I stood up for Region 10, Ben Hager
and Sid DuBose stood up, clapped, yelled and whistled! How
could anyone forget such a spontaneous welcome? This is just
one of the ways Ben Hager endeared himself to all the
members of the American Iris Society.
-Marie Caillet
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