Definite identification of the John Russell who represented Weymouth in 1449 presents difficulties. The name was by no means uncommon, and a credible case might be offered for a number of different men to have been elected for the borough. Four John Russells stand out as possible contenders. One of them lived close to Weymouth at Melcombe Regis, traded as a merchant from that port, and served as bailiff of Melcombe in three successive years, 1425-8.
Yet the strongest case that can be made is that the Weymouth MP of 1449 was the elder son of Henry Russell alias Gascoigne. Henry was a man of considerable influence in the borough which he had himself represented in the Commons in four earlier Parliaments, and on the occasion of the election of November 1449 appeared at the county court to offer sureties for the Members for Weymouth.
John inherited his share of his grandfather Herring’s estates in 1455, a share seemingly much larger than that accorded to his cousin John de la Lynde, although his father retained for life Herring’s principal manor of Chalton Herring.
Towards the end of 1463, or early in the next year, John’s father died and he came into his extensive inheritance (with the exception of the manor of Blynchesfeld, which was kept by his stepmother until her death in 1479).
More is recorded of Russell’s private affairs in this period. In August 1477 he made a settlement on his son James and the latter’s wife Joan, daughter of the late John Wyse, of the manor of Westhall by Sherborne and a moiety of his lands in Horiford.
