biography text

Russell must not be confused with the Navy treasurer Sir William Russell*. The Russells, established at Strensham, on Worcestershire’s southern boundary since the late thirteenth century, VCH Worcs. iv. 203-4. were an important family that regularly represented the county from 1365. J.M.J. Tonks, ‘Lyttletons of Frankley and their estates 1530-1640’, (Oxford Univ. B.Litt. thesis, 1978), p. 157. Russell’s father, Sir Thomas, was elected for Worcestershire when he was only 24, and was sheriff at the time of the 1604 contested election, when he supported the ‘Protestant’ faction. He was subsequently accused of Catholicism, but remained a magistrate and deputy lieutenant. Silcock, 209, 322, 325; CJ, i. 776. Russell himself was also described as a Catholic more than once, but was acquitted by a committee of the Long Parliament. Two Diaries of Long Parl. ed. M. Jansson, 14-15; Harl. 163, f. 412.

On his marriage in 1624, Russell was granted 4,500 acres of his father’s estate, including Great Witley, eight miles south-west of Kidderminster, where he lived until his father’s death. In 1625, while still in his twenties, he was returned for Worcestershire but left no trace on the records of the Parliament. As part of his marriage settlement his father-in-law, Sir Thomas Reade, had promised Russell £500 towards the costs of purchasing a baronetcy. C78/263/8; C142/580/97. However, initial attempts to procure the title via the courtier Endymion Porter† proved unsuccessful. The baronetcy was finally obtained in 1627, but Reade refused to pay, whereupon Russell sued him in Chancery and got permission to levy the money from Reade’s lands. C78/263/8; C22/419/30; CSP Dom. 1629-31, pp. 497, 524.

In 1632 Russell and his father stirred up riots against the disafforestation of Malvern Chase until they were bought off. Smith, 152. Later that same year Sir Thomas died, leaving Russell to inherit 4,500 acres in Worcestershire and additional property outside the county. In all, the estate may have been worth as much as £3,000 p.a. C142/580/97; C2/Chas.I/C84/57; CB, ii. 9. In 1636 Russell’s servants assaulted the agents of William Sandys†, who were engaged in making the Avon navigable. T. Birch, Ct. and Times of Chas. I, 283. Russell even instigated an enclosure riot on one of his own manors. J.S. Hart, Justice Upon Petition, 111. Nevertheless he was a diligent Ship Money sheriff. PC2/46, p. 462.

From late 1642 Russell was the dominant figure in Worcestershire royalism, but he was ousted at the end of 1643 after falling out with his colleagues. R. Hutton, Royalist War Effort, 77-81; Diary of Henry Townshend, ii. 133-5, 137-57. After the war he was indicted for murder at Worcester. Diary of Henry Townshend, i. 185; HMC 6th Rep. 173. He died intestate on 30 Nov. 1669 and was buried the following day at Strensham. Soc. Gen. Strensham par. reg. Administration of his estate was granted on 28 December. PROB 6/44, f. 119v. His eldest surviving son, Francis, sat for Tewkesbury in the 1670s and 1680s.

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