The descendant of a family seated for some generations at Moor Green, King’s Norton, Worcestershire,
Having long been attached to ‘liberal and enlightened principles’, Russell actively supported the campaign for parliamentary reform in the West Midlands. In May 1831 he chaired a meeting of Worcestershire freeholders resident in Birmingham and its neighbourhood which pledged support for the Reform members.
Russell saw himself as a moderate who was committed to the ‘reform of existing abuses, without destroying Institutions’, his object being merely to restore the constitution ‘to its primitive perfection, and to correct those evils which party spirit and time have introduced into it’.
During the 1834 session, Russell demonstrated that there were limitations to his commitment to retrenchment and free trade. In 1832 he had declared his support for ‘the utmost economy in every department of the State’, but he opposed Harvey’s motion for a scrutiny of the pensions list, 18 Feb. 1834.
In November 1834, Russell advised electors that he had no intention of retiring at the dissolution but would once more coalesce with Cookes in the event of a Conservative challenge.
Russell was later said to have had ‘no other ambition than that of discharging his public duties with integrity and honour’.
Around 1835 Russell had quit Kings Heath for the more fashionable Leamington Spa, where he died in November 1850.
