A member of a family long established in Worcestershire, Russell was the grandson of Sir John Russell, a prominent Household man of Richard II. Sir John, who emerged apparently unscathed from the upheavals of 1399, married three times, providing generously for his last wife Elizabeth, the daughter of the Buckinghamshire esquire, William de la Plaunk. An heiress, having inherited manors in Wiltshire, Leicestershire and Buckinghamshire, Elizabeth also enjoyed either dower or jointure interests in the substantial estates of her previous husbands, Sir John Birmingham, Robert, Lord Grey of Rotherfield, and John, Lord Clinton. Even though she was already a lady of substantial means, Sir John agreed that she should retain most of his estates in Worcestershire for life should he predecease her, and that any children she bore him should inherit these lands to the exclusion of their elder half-brothers. As a result, William Russell, his eldest son and heir by his first marriage, was excluded from the family seat at Strensham. When Sir John died in 1405, William appears to have come into immediate possession of little more than the manor of Dormston, a few miles east of Worcester. As it happened, all of Elizabeth’s children (including any she may have borne Sir John) predeceased her, and she also outlived William, not dying until 1423. Yet it is possible that she allowed her stepson control of some of the Russell estates in her hands, and his circumstances were to some extent ameliorated by his own marriage to an heiress. During his brief career, William was elected as a knight of the shire for Worcestershire to the Parliament of March 1416 but he appears never to have served as a commissioner in that county or elsewhere.
Most, if not all, of the Russell lands had passed to William’s son, the subject of this biography, by 1428. Eight years later, these estates, along with the moiety of the manor of Huddington which had come to Robert from the Hodyngtons, his mother’s family, were estimated to produce an income of £66 p.a.
It is not entirely clear whether Russell ever enjoyed possession of another manor, ‘Bolneys’ at Haversham in Buckinghamshire, which Sir John Russell had assigned to his younger son and namesake. In April 1430 the younger John, a clerk, conveyed the property to Sir Thomas Green*, Sir Richard Vernon* and other feoffees, who also included his servant John Aleyn. Some years later, Russell went to the Chancery to complain that Margaret, the widow of Sir Ralph Rochford (d.1439/40) of Lincolnshire had maliciously put it about that this conveyance had been fictional. The purpose of his bill was to request that Aleyn should validate the transaction, and in due course the latter appeared before the chancellor to authenticate it. The bill disguises the fact that Russell was trying to claim a manor that rightfully belonged to Margaret, by virtue of a settlement made by his grandfather Sir John Russell. It also fails to mention that she was a daughter of Sir John and therefore his aunt.
So far as is known, Russell began his public career in the mid 1430s. In 1435 he was returned to the first of his two Parliaments, and within a month of his election he was appointed escheator of Worcestershire. During the Parliament he no doubt looked for guidance to his fellow MP, John Wood I*, an experienced parliamentarian and lawyer attached to the interest of the Beauchamp earls of Warwick. He himself was part of the same interest, an association reinforced by his marriage to Elizabeth, the eldest daughter of John Throckmorton. Another prominent lawyer, Throckmorton was a leading counsellor of Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, a lord with whom Russell’s own father, William Russell, had mustered for military service in France in 1417.
Russell is likely to have married Elizabeth shortly before June 1434 when the manors of Strensham and Peopleton were settled on the couple and their issue.
The Beauchamp earls of Warwick were the hereditary sheriffs of Worcestershire and it was to the Beauchamp connexion that Russell owed his term as deputy sheriff in 1442-3. Shortly after completing that term, he was caught up in an outbreak of lawlessness. During 1444 he and other gentry participated in a series of raids on lands in Gloucestershire which Katherine, the wife of Sir William Peyto‡, held in dower from her earlier marriage to Thomas Stafford† of Baginton, Warwickshire. Most of the raiders were associated with John Beauchamp, Lord of Powick, and his ally, Ralph Butler, Lord Sudeley, although Russell was said to have taken part in one of the attacks as a ‘feedman to the Abbot of Pershore and so to my lord of Warrewyk’, the then earl, Henry Beauchamp. It was an unfortunate irony that Katherine’s husband, at this time almost certainly a prisoner in France, was another Beauchamp retainer.
It is not known when Russell died, although he is not heard of alive after the autumn of 1449. In the spring of the following year, his wife acted alone as a plaintiff in the court of common pleas, suggesting that she was already a widow at that date.
Whenever he died, Russell was succeeded by his eldest son John, a Lancastrian who forfeited the manor of Strensham to the Crown by virtue of the Act of Attainder passed in the Parliament of 1461.
