The cinnamon rose of gardens is so called because of its supposed cinnamon scent, which is present but often faint. It is rather low rose, 3-4 feet, with greyish foliage. It is an early flowerer (mid-May) with pink single flowers (the cultivar "plena" has attractive semi-double flowers).
As a denizen of northern Europe it is very hardy and was much planted in New England where it not only withstood the winters but formed long-lived suckering thickets. Outlasting houses the rose is often the sole remnant of past settlement and it is consequently considered naturalised in many States of the northeastern USA.