{{Short description|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1846–1852, 1865–1866)}} {{redirect2|Lord John Russell|The Earl Russell|other holders of either title|Lord John Russell (disambiguation)|and|Earl Russell}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2014}} {{Use British English|date=October 2020}} {{Infobox officeholder | honorific_prefix = [[The Right Honourable]] | name = The Earl Russell | honorific_suffix = {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|KG|GCMG|PC|FRS}} | image = John-Russell-1st-Earl-Russell (3x4 cropped).jpg | alt = albumen print mounted on photographic paper | caption = Photograph by [[John Jabez Edwin Mayall]], 1861 | office = [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] | term_start = 29 October 1865 | term_end = 26 June 1866 | monarch = [[Queen Victoria|Victoria]] | predecessor = [[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston|The Viscount Palmerston]] | successor = [[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|The Earl of Derby]] | term_start2 = 30 June 1846 | term_end2 = 21 February 1852 | monarch2 = Victoria | predecessor2 = [[Robert Peel]] | successor2 = The Earl of Derby | office3 = [[Leader of the Opposition (United Kingdom)|Leader of the Opposition]] | prime_minister3 = {{ubl|The Earl of Derby|Benjamin Disraeli}} | term_start3 = 28 June 1866 | term_end3 = 3 December 1868 | predecessor3 = The Earl of Derby | successor3 = [[Benjamin Disraeli]] | prime_minister4 = The Earl of Derby | term_start4 = 23 February 1852 | term_end4 = 19 December 1852 | predecessor4 = The Earl of Derby | successor4 = The Earl of Derby | office5 = [[Foreign Secretary (United Kingdom)|Foreign Secretary]] | prime_minister5 = The Viscount Palmerston | term_start5 = 18 June 1859 | term_end5 = 3 November 1865 | predecessor5 = [[James Harris, 3rd Earl of Malmesbury|The Earl of Malmesbury]] | successor5 = [[George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon|The Earl of Clarendon]] | prime_minister6 = [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|The Earl of Aberdeen]] | term_start6 = 28 December 1852 | term_end6 = 21 February 1853 | predecessor6 = The Earl of Malmesbury | successor6 = The Earl of Clarendon | office7 = [[Secretary of State for the Colonies]] | prime_minister7 = The Viscount Palmerston | term_start7 = 23 February 1855 | term_end7 = 21 July 1855 | predecessor7 = [[Sidney Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Lea|Sidney Herbert]] | successor7 = [[Sir William Molesworth, 8th Baronet|Sir William Molesworth]] | office8 = [[Lord President of the Council]] | prime_minister8 = The Earl of Aberdeen | term_start8 = 12 June 1854 | term_end8 = 8 February 1855 | predecessor8 = [[Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville|The Earl Granville]] | successor8 = The Earl Granville | office9 = [[Secretary of State for War and the Colonies]] | prime_minister9 = [[William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne|The Viscount Melbourne]] | term_start9 = 30 August 1839 | term_end9 = 30 August 1841 | predecessor9 = [[Constantine Phipps, 1st Marquess of Normanby|The Marquess of Normanby]] | successor9 = [[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley]] | office10 = [[Home Secretary]] | prime_minister10 = The Viscount Melbourne | term_start10 = 18 April 1835 | term_end10 = 30 August 1839 | predecessor10 = [[Henry Goulburn]] | successor10 = The Marquess of Normanby | office11 = [[#Offices and distinctions|Additional positions]] | birth_name = John Russell | birth_date = {{birth date|1792|8|18|df=yes}} | birth_place = [[Mayfair]], [[Middlesex]], England | death_date = {{death date and age|1878|5|28|1792|8|18|df=yes}} | death_place = [[Pembroke Lodge, Richmond Park|Richmond Park]], [[Surrey]], England | resting_place = [[St Michael's, Chenies]] | alma_mater = [[University of Edinburgh]] | party = [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] (1859–1878) | other_party = [[Whigs (British political party)|Whig]] (before 1859) | father = [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford|6th Duke of Bedford]] | spouse = {{ubl | {{marriage|Adelaide Lister|1835|1838|end=died}} | {{marriage|[[Frances Russell, Countess Russell|Frances Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound]]|1841}} }} | children = 6, including {{enum|[[John Russell, Viscount Amberley|John]], [[Rollo Russell|Rollo]], and [[Lady Agatha Russell|Agatha]]}} | relatives = [[Bertrand Russell]] (grandson) | signature = John Russell, 1st Earl Russell Signature.svg | signature_alt = Cursive signature in ink }}
[[File:Shield of arms of John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, KG, GCMG, PC, FRS.png|thumb|Garter-encircled arms of John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, KG, GCMG, PC, FRS]] '''John Russell, 1st Earl Russell''' (18 August 1792 – 28 May 1878), known as '''Lord John Russell''' before 1861, was a British [[Whigs (British political party)|Whig]] and [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] statesman who was [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] from 1846 to 1852 and again from 1865 to 1866.
The third son of the [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford|6th Duke of Bedford]], Russell was educated at [[Westminster School]] and Edinburgh University before entering Parliament in 1813. In 1828 he took a leading role in the repeal of the [[Test Act]]s which discriminated against Catholics and Protestant dissenters. He was one of the principal architects of the [[Reform Act 1832]], which was the first major reform of Parliament since the [[Stuart Restoration|Restoration]], and a significant early step on the road to democracy and away from rule by the aristocracy and [[landed gentry]]. He favoured expanding the right to vote to the [[middle class]]es and enfranchising Britain's growing industrial towns and cities, but he never advocated universal suffrage and he opposed the secret ballot. Russell was outspoken on many issues over the course of his career, advocating [[Catholic emancipation]] in the 1820s, calling for the repeal of the [[Corn Laws]] in 1845, denouncing [[Pope Pius IX]]'s [[Universalis Ecclesiae|revival of Catholic bishoprics]] in 1850, and supporting [[Italian unification]] during the 1860s.
Russell's ministerial career spanned four decades. In addition to his two terms as prime minister, between 1831 and 1865 he served in the cabinets of [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey|Earl Grey]], [[William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne|Viscount Melbourne]], the [[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|Earl of Aberdeen]], and [[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston|Viscount Palmerston]]. Russell's relationship with Palmerston was often stormy and contributed to bringing down Russell's first government in 1852 and Palmerston's first government in 1858. However, their renewed alliance from 1859 was one of the foundations of the united Liberal Party, which would go on to dominate British politics in the following decades. While Russell was an energetic and effective minister during the 1830s and helped to commit the Whigs to a reform agenda, he proved less successful as prime minister. During his two periods as prime minister he often suffered from a disunited cabinet and weak support in the House of Commons, meaning he was unable to carry out much of his agenda. During his first premiership, his government failed to deal effectively with the [[Irish Famine]], a disaster that saw the loss of a quarter of Ireland's population through death and emigration. During his second premiership, he split his party by pressing for further parliamentary reform and was forced from office only to watch [[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Derby]] and [[Disraeli]] carry a more ambitious [[Reform Act 1867|Reform Bill]].
== Early life and education == Russell was born on 18 August 1792 into the highest echelons of the British aristocracy, being the third son of [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford|John Russell, later 6th Duke of Bedford]], and Georgiana Byng, daughter of [[George Byng, 4th Viscount Torrington]]. [[Duke of Bedford|The Russell family]] had been one of the principal Whig dynasties in England since the 17th century, and were among the richest handful of aristocratic landowning families in the country, but as a younger son of the [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford|6th Duke of Bedford]], he was not expected to inherit the family estates. As a younger son of a duke, he bore the [[courtesy title]] "Lord John Russell", but he was not a peer in his own right. He was, therefore, able to sit in the House of Commons until he was made an earl in 1861 and was elevated to the House of Lords.
Russell was born two months premature and was small and sickly as a child (even in adulthood he remained under {{convert|5|ft|5|in}} in height, and his small stature was frequently the butt of jokes by political opponents and caricaturists).{{sfn|Prest|2009}} In 1801, at the age of nine, he was sent away to school. Shortly thereafter, his mother died. After being withdrawn from [[Westminster School]] in 1804 due to ill health, Russell was educated by tutors, including [[Edmund Cartwright]].{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=5}} In 1806, Russell's father was made [[Lord Lieutenant of Ireland]] in the short-lived [[Ministry of All the Talents]], and it was during this time that the young Russell met [[Charles James Fox]].{{sfn|Reid|1895|p=9}} Fox was Russell's formative political hero and would remain an inspiration throughout his life.{{sfn|Prest|2009}} Russell attended the [[University of Edinburgh]] from 1809 to 1812, lodging with Professor [[John Playfair]], who oversaw his studies.{{sfn|Reid|1895|p=12}} He did not take a degree. Although often in poor health, he travelled widely in Britain and in [[Continental Europe]],{{sfn|Prest|1972|p=11-13}} and held a commission as Captain in the [[Bedfordshire Militia]] in 1810.<ref name="hop">[http://www.histparl.ac.uk/volume/1790-1820/member/russell-lord-john-ii-1792-1878]{{dead link|date=April 2017|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}} History of Parliament article by R. G. Thorne.</ref> During his continental travels, Russell visited Spain where his [[Lord George Russell|brother]] was serving as aide-de-camp to [[Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington|Lord Wellington]] in the [[Peninsular War]].{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=62–76}} The following year, Russell had a 90-minute meeting with [[Napoleon]] in December 1814, during the former emperor's exile at [[Elba]].{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=74–75}}
== Early political career: 1813–1846 == ===Backbench MP: 1813–1830=== Russell entered the [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]] as a [[Whigs (British political party)|Whig]] in 1813 at the age of 20. The future reformer gained his seat by virtue of his father, the [[6th Duke of Bedford|Duke of Bedford]], [[Rotten and pocket boroughs|instructing the 30 or so electors of Tavistock]] to return him as an MP even though at the time Russell was abroad and under age.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=69–70}}
Russell entered Parliament more out of a sense of duty and family tradition than out of serious political ambition. With the exception of the 1806–1807 coalition government in which Russell's father had served, the Whigs had been out of power since 1783, and Russell could have had no certain expectation of a ministerial career. In June 1815, Russell denounced the [[Bourbon Restoration in France|Bourbon Restoration]] and Britain's declaration of war against the [[Hundred Days|recently-returned Napoleon]] by arguing in the House of Commons that foreign powers had no right to dictate France's form of government.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1815/jun/05/committee-of-supply|title=Committee of Supply|House House of Commons|access-date=19 January 2021}}</ref>
In 1817, tired of the prospect of perpetual opposition, Russell resigned from Parliament. After spending a year out of politics and travelling on the continent, he changed his mind and re-entered Parliament for Tavistock at the [[1818 United Kingdom general election|1818 general election]].{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=19}} In 1819, Russell embraced the cause of parliamentary reform and he led the more reformist wing of the Whigs throughout the 1820s. In 1828, while still an opposition [[backbencher]], Russell introduced a [[Sacramental Test Act 1828|Sacramental Test bill]] with the aim of abolishing the prohibitions on Catholics and Protestant dissenters being elected to local government and from holding civil and military offices. The bill gained the backing of the Tory [[Home Secretary]] [[Sir Robert Peel]] and was passed into law.<ref>{{cite book |first=Norman |last=Gash |title=Mr Secretary Peel |year=1961 |pages=460–465}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |first=Richard A. |last=Gaunt |title=Peel's Other Repeal: The Test and Corporation Acts, 1828 |journal=Parliamentary History |year=2014 |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=243–262}}</ref>
===Minister under Grey and Melbourne: 1830–1841=== When the Whigs came to power in 1830, Russell entered [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey|Earl Grey's]] government as [[Paymaster of the Forces]]. Despite being a relatively junior minister, as a vocal advocate for Parliamentary reform for over a decade, Russell became a principal leader in the fight for the [[Reform Act 1832]]. He was one of the committee of four tasked by Grey with drafting the reform bill, alongside cabinet ministers [[John Lambton, 1st Earl of Durham|Lord Durham]], [[John Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough|Lord Duncannon]] and [[Sir James Graham, 2nd Baronet|Sir James Graham]]. Despite not yet being in the Cabinet, Russell was chosen to introduce the bill in March 1831 and over the following year he successfully steered the Reform Act's difficult progress through the Commons.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=44-52}}
Russell earned the nickname "Finality Jack" from his pronouncing the Act a final measure but in later years he would go on to push for further reform of Parliament.{{efn|Other sources use the nickname "Finality John": {{Cite Nuttall|Russell, John, Earl|short=x}} {{Cite NIE|wstitle=Finality John|short=x}}}} In May 1834, Russell made a speech on the Irish Tithes bill, in which he argued that the revenue generated by tithes was more than was justified by the size of the [[Church of Ireland|established Protestant church in Ireland]]. Russell argued that a proportion the tithe revenue should instead be appropriated for the education of the Irish poor, regardless of denomination.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1834/may/06/tithes-ireland#S3V0023P0_18340506_HOC_48|House House of Commons|access-date=24 January 2021}}</ref>
The speech was seen by its opponents as an attack on the established church in Ireland and it cemented a split within Grey's government over the issue of Irish tithes.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=208-209}} The following month [[Derby Dilly|four members of the Cabinet]] resigned over the issue, weakening the government's hold on Parliament.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1834/jun/02/church-of-ireland-adjourned-debate|House House of Commons|access-date=24 January 2021}}</ref> Sensing that his position was now hopeless, Grey offered his resignation to the King in July, and was replaced by [[William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne|Viscount Melbourne]] at the head of the government. [[File:The Russel Purge; etching by CJG, 1831. Wellcome L0006863.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.13|A pro-reform cartoon of 1831 depicting Russell as the man with the cure for the country's ills. Tory MPs for [[rotten and pocket boroughs]] are shown as patients requiring "The Russell Purge".]]
In November 1834, when the leader of the Commons, [[John Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer|Lord Althorp]], succeeded to the peerage as [[Earl Spencer (peerage)|Earl Spencer]], Russell became the leader of the Whigs in the Commons. Russell's appointment prompted [[King William IV]] to terminate Melbourne's government, in part because the King objected to Russell's views on the Irish Church.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=217-218}} This remains the last time in British history that a monarch has dismissed a government.{{sfn|Hawkins|2007|p=152}} The subsequent minority Conservative government lasted less than five months before resigning in April 1835.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Cragoe | first=Matthew | title=Sir Robert Peel and the ‘Moral Authority’ of the House of Commons, 1832–41 | journal=The English Historical Review | volume=128 | issue=530 | date=2013-02-01 | issn=1477-4534 | doi=10.1093/ehr/ces357 | pages=55–77 | url=https://academic.oup.com/ehr/article/128/530/55/506757 | access-date=2025-07-05| url-access=subscription }}</ref> Russell then returned to government office as [[Home Secretary]] in [[Second Melbourne ministry|Melbourne's second government]] which was announced on 20 April 1835.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} Soon after the formation of the new cabinet, the Melbourne called a [[1835 United Kingdom general election|general election]], in which Russell suffered the loss of his home constituency in [[Devon]]shire as a result of strong Tory campaigning against Russell.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} However, as the government had not yet formed in the Commons, a new seat was found for him in the seat of [[Stroud]] by persuading [[Charles Richard Fox]] to step down.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} On 19 May he was duly elected again just in time to take his place as Home Secretary and head of the government in the Commons.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} Through this period, he continued to lead the more reformist wing of the Whig party.
As Home Secretary, Russell recommended and secured conditional royal pardons for the [[Tolpuddle Martyrs]] and partial commutation of their sentences.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1835/jun/25/the-dorchester-labourer|House House of Commons|access-date=30 January 2021}}</ref>{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} In October 1835 he published plans for prison reform and appointed the first official prison inspectors.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} In 1837, he chose not to reform the convocation of the 'Hanging Cabinet' that decided, without agreed procedures, on the [[Royal prerogative of mercy]] in [[Capital punishment in the United Kingdom|death sentences]].{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195,239}} As Home Secretary, he served as the last official receiver of pleas for mercy from those condemned to death. Some of these cases, such as those of [[James Pratt and John Smith]], would, in the 21st century, be legally reviewed, leading to posthumous pardons.{{sfn|Bryant|2024|pp=193-195}} In 1836, he introduced the [[Marriage Act 1836|Marriages Act]], which introduced civil marriages in England and Wales and allowed Catholics and Protestant Dissenters to marry in their own churches.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1836/feb/12/registration-of-births-c-dissenters|House House of Commons|access-date=29 January 2021}}</ref>
In 1837, he steered a series of seven Acts through Parliament, which together reduced the number of offences carrying a sentence of death from thirty-seven to sixteen.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1837/mar/23/criminal-law|title =Criminal Law|House House of Commons|access-date=30 January 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Hansard|url=1837/may/19/capital-punishments|title =Capital Punishments|House House of Commons|access-date=25 January 2021}}</ref> This number was reduced further by the [[Substitution of Punishments of Death Act 1841]]. After these reforms the death penalty was rarely used in the United Kingdom for crimes other than murder. As Home Secretary Russell also introduced the public registration for births, marriages and deaths and played a large role in democratising the government of cities outside of London.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
He then served as [[Secretary of State for War and the Colonies]] from 1839 to 1841.{{sfn|Egerton|2010|pp=495}}
===Opposition: 1841–1846=== In 1841 the Whigs lost the [[1841 United Kingdom general election|general election]] to the Conservatives and Russell and his colleagues returned to opposition. In November 1845, following the failure of that year's potato harvest across Britain and Ireland, Russell came out in favour of the repeal of the [[Corn Laws]] and called upon the Prime Minister [[Robert Peel|Sir Robert Peel]] to take urgent action to alleviate the emerging food crisis.<ref>''The Times'' (27 November 1845), pg. 5.</ref>
Peel had by this time already become convinced of the need for repeal, but he was opposed in this by the majority of his own cabinet and party. On 11 December 1845, frustrated by his party's unwillingness to support him on repeal, Peel resigned as prime minister and [[Queen Victoria]] invited Russell to form a new government. With the Whigs a minority in the Commons however, Russell struggled to assemble the necessary support. When [[Henry George Grey, 3rd Earl Grey|Lord Grey]] declared that he would not serve in cabinet if [[Lord Palmerston]] was made Foreign Secretary, it became clear to Russell that he could not form a viable government.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=410-416}}
Russell declined the Queen's invitation on 21 December and Peel agreed to stay on as prime minister. In June 1846, Peel repealed the Corn Laws with Whig support, bitterly dividing the Conservative Party in the process. Later that same night Peel's [[Coercion Act|Irish Coercion Bill]] was defeated after vengeful anti-repeal Tories voted with the opposition; and Peel, taking this as a vote of no confidence, resigned as prime minister. Russell accepted the Queen's offer to form a government; this time Grey did not object to Palmerston's appointment.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=422-424}}
== Prime minister: 1846–1852<span class="anchor" id="First premiership"></span><!-- linked from redirects [[First premiership of John Russell]], [[First prime ministership of John Russell]], [[Premiership of Lord John Russell]], [[Prime ministership of Lord John Russell]] -->==
=== Appointment === {{Further|First Russell ministry}} Russell took office as prime minister with the Whigs only a minority in the House of Commons. It was the bitter split in the Conservative Party over the Corn Laws that allowed Russell's government to remain in power in spite of this, with Sir Robert Peel and his supporters offering tentative support to the new ministry in order to keep the protectionist Conservatives under [[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley]] in opposition. At the [[1847 United Kingdom general election|general election of August 1847]] the Whigs made gains at the expense of the Conservatives, but remained a minority, with Russell's government still dependent on the votes of [[Peelite]] and [[Repeal Association|Irish Repealer]] MPs to win divisions in the Commons.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
===Domestic agenda=== {{Expand section|date=August 2024}}[[File:The Royal Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851.jpg|thumb|upright=1.59|alt=Group portrait of the Royal Commissioners of the Great Exhibition by Henry Wyndham Phillips|Russell served on the [[Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851|Royal Commission]] for the [[Great Exhibition]], which took place in 1851 while he was Prime Minister. In this group portrait of the Commissioners, by [[Henry Wyndham Phillips]], Russell is depicted standing behind [[Albert, Prince Consort|Prince Albert]] (fifth from right).]] Russell's political agenda was frequently frustrated by his lack of a reliable Commons majority. However, his government was able to secure a number of notable social reforms. Russell introduced teachers' pensions and used [[Order in Council|Orders in Council]] to make grants for teacher training. The [[Baths and wash houses in Britain#Regulation|Public Baths and Wash-houses Acts]] of 1847 and 1848 enabled local authorities to build municipal baths and washing facilities for the growing urban working classes. Russell lent his support to the passage of the [[Factories Act 1847]], which restricted the working hours of women and young persons (aged 13–18) in textile mills to 10 hours per day.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
1848 saw the introduction of the [[Metropolitan Commission of Sewers]] and the [[Public Health Act 1848]] ([[11 & 12 Vict.]] c. 63), by which the state assumed responsibility for sewerage, clean water supply, refuse collection and other aspects of public health across much of England and Wales.{{sfn|Walpole|1889a|pp=454-455}}<ref>Elizabeth Free & Theodore M. Brown, "The Public Health Act of 1848." ''Bulletin of the World Health Organisation'' 83(11) (November 2005)[https://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/83/11/866.pdf]</ref>
Following the election of [[Lionel de Rothschild]] in the 1847 general election, Russell introduced a Jewish Relief bill, which would have allowed Rothschild and other Jews to sit in the House of Commons without their having to take the explicitly Christian oath of allegiance. In 1848, the bill was passed by the House of Commons, receiving support from the Whigs and a minority of Conservatives (including future prime minister [[Benjamin Disraeli]]). However, it was twice rejected by the Tory dominated House of Lords, as was a new bill in 1851. Rothschild was re-elected in the 1852 general election following the fall of the Russell government but was unable to take his seat until the [[Jews Relief Act 1858|Jews Relief Act]] was finally passed in 1858.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
===Ireland=== Russell's government led the calamitous response to the [[Great Famine (Ireland)|Irish Famine]]. During the course of the famine, an estimated one million people died from a combination of malnutrition, disease and starvation and well over one million more [[Irish diaspora|emigrated from Ireland]].{{sfn|Ross|2002|p=226}} After taking office in 1846, Russell's ministry introduced a programme of public works that by the end of that year employed some half-a-million but proved impossible to administer.{{sfn|Lyons|1973|pp=30–34}} In 1846 Russell reported that in one year more than 50,000 Irish families had been "turned out of their wretched dwellings without pity and without refuge...we have made it the most degraded and most miserable country in the world...all the world is crying shame upon us."<ref>{{cite book |last=Macardle |first=Dorothy |author-link= |date=1965 |title=The Irish Republic |url= |location=New York |publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux |page=45 |isbn=}}</ref> In January 1847, the government abandoned this policy, realising that it had failed, and turned to a mixture of "indoor" and "outdoor" direct relief; the former administered in [[workhouse]]s through the [[Irish Poor Laws]], the latter through [[soup kitchen]]s. The costs of the Poor Law fell primarily on the local landlords, some of whom in turn attempted to reduce their liability by evicting their tenants.{{sfn|Lyons|1973|pp=30–34}} In June 1847, the [[Irish Poor Law Extension Act|Poor Law Extension Act]] was passed, which embodied the principle, popular in Britain, that Irish property should support Irish poverty. Irish landlords were believed in Britain to have created the conditions that led to the famine, a view which Russell shared.{{sfn|Taylor|1976|pp=77-78}}
===Relations with the Roman Catholic Church=== In the first half of his premiership Russell aimed to improve the British government's relations with the papacy and the Catholic clergy in Ireland, which he saw as one of the keys to making Ireland a more willing part of the United Kingdom. Russell proposed to make an annual grant of £340,000 to the Catholic Church in Ireland, with the aim of ameliorating Irish Catholic opinion towards [[Acts of Union 1800|the Union]]. In 1847, Russell's father-in-law the [[Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 2nd Earl of Minto|Earl of Minto]] was dispatched on a confidential mission to Rome to seek the [[Pius IX|Pope's]] support for the grants plan. In the end, the idea had to be abandoned due to Catholic objections to what they saw as an attempt to control their clergy.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=158-159}}
However, Russell pressed ahead with plans to re-establish formal diplomatic relations between the [[Court of St James's]] and the [[Holy See]], which had been severed when [[James II of England|James II]] was deposed in 1688. Russell managed to pass an Act to authorise an exchange of ambassadors with Rome, but not before the bill was amended by Parliament to stipulate that the Pope's ambassador must be a [[layman]]. The Pope refused to accept such a restriction on his choice of representative and so the exchange of ambassadors did not take place.{{sfn|Prest|2009}} It would not be until 1914 that formal [[Holy See–United Kingdom relations|UK-Vatican diplomatic relations]] were finally established. Relations with the papacy soured badly in late 1850 after [[Pius IX|Pope Pius IX]] issued the [[papal bull|bull]] ''[[Universalis Ecclesiae]]''. By this bull Pius unilaterally reintroduced Catholic bishops to England and Wales for the first time since the [[English Reformation|Reformation]]. Anti-Catholic feelings ran high with many Protestants incensed at what they saw as impertinent foreign interference in the prerogative of the established [[Church of England]] to appoint bishops. Russell, not withstanding his long record of advocating civil liberties for Catholics, shared the traditional Whig suspicion of the Catholic hierarchy, and was angered at what he saw as a papal imposition. On 4 November 1850, in a letter to the [[Edward Maltby|Bishop of Durham]] published in ''The Times'' the same day, Russell wrote that the Pope's actions suggested a "pretension to supremacy" and declared that "No foreign prince or potentate will be permitted to fasten his fetters upon a nation which has so long and so nobly vindicated its right to freedom of opinion, civil, political, and religious". Russell's "Durham letter" won him popular support in England but in Ireland it was viewed as an unwarranted insult to the Pope. It lost Russell the confidence of Irish Repealer MPs and the cabinet were angered that he had made such an incendiary statement without having consulting them.{{sfn|Reid|1895|pp=188-189}}
The following year Russell passed the [[Ecclesiastical Titles Act 1851]] with Tory support, which made it a criminal offence carrying a fine of £100 for anyone outside of the Church of England to assume an episcopal title "of any city, town or place, or of any territory or district...in the United Kingdom." The Act was widely ignored without consequences and only served to further alienate Irish MPs, thereby weakening the government's position in the Commons.{{sfn|Prest|2009}}
===Disagreements with Palmerston and fall of ministry=== Russell frequently clashed with his headstrong Foreign Secretary, [[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston|Lord Palmerston]], whose belligerence and support for continental revolution he found embarrassing. In 1847 Palmerston provoked a confrontation with the French government by undermining the plans of the Spanish court to marry the young [[Isabel II of Spain|Spanish Queen]] and [[Infanta Luisa Fernanda, Duchess of Montpensier|her sister]] into the French royal family.{{sfn|Walpole|1889b|pp=1-10}} He subsequently clashed with Russell over plans to increase the size of the army and the navy to defend against the perceived threat of French invasion, which subsided after the overthrow of the [[Louis Philippe I|French king]] in 1848.{{sfn|Walpole|1889b|pp=13-25}}
In 1850, further tension arose between the two over Palmerston's [[gunboat diplomacy]] in the [[Don Pacifico affair]], in which Palmerston sought compensation from the [[Government of Greece|Greek government]] for the ransacking and the burning of the house of [[David Pacifico]], a Gibraltarian holder of a British passport.{{sfn|Chambers|2004|p=313}} Russell considered the matter "hardly worth the interposition of the British lion," and when Palmerston ignored some of his instructions, the Prime Minister wrote to Palmerston telling him he had informed the Queen that he "thought the interests of the country required that a change should take place at the Foreign Department."{{sfn|Walpole|1889b|pp=56-60}} However, less than a month later [[Edward Geoffrey Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Lord Stanley]] successfully led the House of Lords into passing a motion of censure of the Government over its handling of the affair and Russell realised that he needed to align with Palmerston in order to prevent a similar motion being passed by the House of Commons, which would have obliged the Government to resign.{{sfn|Walpole|1889b|pp=61-62}} The Government prevailed, but Palmerston came out of the affair with his popularity at new heights since he was seen as the champion of defending British subjects anywhere in the world.{{sfn|Chambers|2004|pp=323–4}}
Russell forced Palmerston to resign as Foreign Secretary after Palmerston recognised [[Napoleon III]]'s coup of 2 December 1851 without first consulting the Queen or Cabinet.<ref>G. H. L. Le May, "The Ministerial Crisis of 1851." ''History Today'' (June 1951), Vol. 1 Issue 6, p52-58</ref> Russell tried to strengthen his government by recruiting leading Peelites such as [[Sir James Graham, 2nd Baronet|Sir James Graham]] and [[Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle|the Duke of Newcastle]] to his administration, but they declined.{{sfn|Walpole|1889b|p=143}} Out of office, Palmerston sought revenge by turning a vote on a militia bill into a [[Motions of no confidence in the United Kingdom|vote of confidence]] in the Government. A majority vote in favour of an amendment proposed by Palmerston caused the downfall of Russell's ministry on 21 February 1852. This was Palmerston's famous "tit for tat with Johnny Russell."{{sfn|Prest|2009}}
==Between premierships: 1852–1865== === In opposition: February–December 1852 === Following Russell's resignation, on the 23 February 1852 the [[Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby|Earl of Derby]] accepted the Queen's invitation to form a government. The new Conservative ministry were a minority in the Commons due to the continuing rift with the [[Peelites]]. Derby called a [[1852 United Kingdom general election|general election]] for July but failed to secure a majority. After the election Derby's Conservatives held 292 out of the 662 seats in the Commons but were able to carry on in office due to divisions among the opposition. Negotiations over a Whig-Peelite coalition stalled over the question of who would lead it. Russell's authority and popularity within the Whigs had been dented by his falling out with Palmerston, who flatly refused to serve under him again. Moreover he had alienated many in the Peelites and the Irish Brigade, who held the balance of power in the Commons, leaving them unwilling to support another Russell-led government. Palmerston proposed [[Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne|Lord Lansdowne]] as a compromise candidate. This was acceptable to Russell but Lansdowne was reluctant to take on the burdens of leading a government. The defeat of [[Benjamin Disraeli|Disraeli's]] [[Budget of the United Kingdom|Budget]] in December 1852 forced the issue. Derby's government resigned and the Queen sent for Lansdowne and the Peelite [[George Hamilton Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen|Lord Aberdeen]]. Lansdowne declined the Queen's invitation, pleading ill-health and so Aberdeen was tasked with forming a government.{{sfn|Prest|2009}}{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=195-199}}
=== The Aberdeen coalition: 1852–1855 === {{Further|Aberdeen ministry}} [[File:John Russell, 1st Earl Russell by Sir Francis Grant.jpg|thumb|upright|left|alt=John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, by Sir Francis Grant|''[[Portrait of Lord John Russell]]'' by [[Francis Grant (artist)|Francis Grant]], 1853]] Russell, as the leader of the Whigs, agreed to bring his party into a coalition with the Peelites, headed by Aberdeen. As the leader of the largest party in the coalition, Russell was reluctant to serve under Aberdeen in a subordinate position, but agreed to take on the role of Foreign Secretary on a temporary basis, to lend stability to the fledgling government. He resigned the role in February 1853 in favour of [[George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon|Clarendon]], but continued to lead for the government in the Commons and attended cabinet without ministerial responsibilities. Russell was unhappy that half of Aberdeen's cabinet was made up of Peelites, despite the fact that the Whigs contributed hundreds of MPs to the Government's support in the Commons, and the Peelites only around 40. However, he came to admire some of his Peelite colleagues, particularly the Chancellor of the Exchequer [[William Ewart Gladstone|William Gladstone]], who would go on to become an important political ally in later years.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=199-204}}
With Aberdeen's agreement, Russell used his position as [[Leader of the House of Commons]] to push for a new Reform Act. Although Russell had promoted the [[Reform Act 1832]] as a one-off measure to re-balance the constitution, after twenty years he had become convinced of the need for further electoral reform. In February 1854 Russell introduced his bill to the House. The property qualification was to be reduced from £10 to £6 in boroughs, and from £50 to £10 in the counties. Additionally 66 seats would be removed from undersized constituencies and redistributed.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=204-206}} The second reading of the bill was set for March 1854, but the prospect of imminent war with Russia led to it being postponed until April. After the outbreak of war on 28 March Russell came under pressure from the cabinet to withdraw the bill entirely. Russell threatened to resign if the cabinet abandoned the reform bill, but he was convinced to stay on by Aberdeen, who promised that he would support the reform bill if Russell reintroduced it in a future session.{{sfn|Reid|1895|pp=240-243}}{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=208}} However, with the fall of the Aberdeen government the following year, it would be 12 years before Russell had another chance to introduce a reform bill.
Together with Palmerston, Russell supported the government taking a hard line against Russian territorial ambitions in the [[Ottoman Empire]], a policy that ultimately resulted in Britain's entry into the [[Crimean War]] in March 1854, an outcome that the more cautious Aberdeen had hoped to avoid. In the following months Russell grew frustrated by what he saw as a lack of effective war leadership by Aberdeen and the [[Secretary of State for War]], the [[Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle|Duke of Newcastle]]. Dispatches from the front reported that the army was suffering from supply shortages and a lack of adequate accommodation and medical facilities. In November 1854 Russell urged Aberdeen to replace Newcastle with Palmerston, who he believed would get a firmer grip on the organisation of the war, but these suggestions came to nothing. In January 1855, after a series of military setbacks, a Commons motion was brought by the radical MP [[John Arthur Roebuck|John Roebuck]] to appoint a select committee to investigate the management of the war. Russell, not wishing to vote against an inquiry he believed was badly needed, resigned from the cabinet in order to abstain. Aberdeen viewed the Roebuck motion as a vote of no confidence in his leadership and, accordingly, when it passed by 305-148, he resigned.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=225-229}}{{sfn|Prest|2009}}
In the eyes of many, including the Queen and Aberdeen, Russell's temperamental behaviour and personal ambition had undermined the stability of the coalition.{{sfn|Martin|1923|pp=107–112}} On visiting [[Windsor Castle]] to resign, Aberdeen told the Queen "Had it not been for the incessant attempts of Lord John Russell to keep up party differences, it must be acknowledged that the experiment of a coalition had succeeded admirably," an assessment with which the Queen agreed.<ref>''Queen Victoria's Journals, Tuesday 30th January 1855, Windsor Castle, Princess Beatrice's copies'', Volume:39 (1 January 1855 – 30 June 1855), pp. 47–48, [http://www.queenvictoriasjournals.org/search/displayItem.do?FormatType=fulltextimgsrc&QueryType=articles&ResultsID=2738818125973&filterSequence=1&PageNumber=1&ItemNumber=7&ItemID=qvj08067&volumeType=PSBEA Online from the Bodleian Library]</ref> Russell accepted an invitation from the Queen to form a new government but found that he could not assemble the necessary support, with many of his colleagues having been angered by his abandonment of Aberdeen over the Roebuck motion.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=229-230}} Palmerston became prime minister, and Russell reluctantly accepted the role of Colonial Secretary in his cabinet. Russell was sent to Vienna to negotiate peace terms with Russia, but his proposals were rejected and he resigned from the cabinet and returned to the backbenches in July 1855.{{sfn|Vincent|1981|pp=37–49}}{{sfn|Arnold|2002|p=121}}
=== Return to the backbenches: 1855–1859 === Following his resignation Russell wrote to his father-in-law that he would not serve again under Palmerston or any other prime minister.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=246}} For a time it appeared as if his career in frontbench politics might be over. Russell continued to speak out from the backbenches on the issues he most cared about - lobbying for increased government grants for education and for reduction in the property qualification for Parliamentary elections.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=246-247}} In early 1857 Russell became a vocal critic of Palmerston's government over the [[Anglo-Persian War]] and the [[Second Opium War]]. Russell spoke in support of a motion tabled by [[Richard Cobden]], which criticised British military action in China and calling for a select committee inquiry. When the motion passed on 3 March, Palmerston dissolved Parliament and went to the country.{{sfn|Reid|1895|p=287}} In the subsequent [[1857 United Kingdom general election|general election]] Palmerston was swept back into power on a tide of patriotic feeling with an increased majority. Many of Palmerston's critics lost their seats but Russell hung on in the City of London, after fighting off an attempt to deselect him and replace him with a pro-Palmerston Whig candidate.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=247-248}} Palmerston's triumph was short-lived. In February 1858 the Government rushed through a Conspiracy to Murder bill, following the [[Orsini plot|attempted assassination]] of Napoleon III by Italian nationalist [[Felice Orsini]] - an attack planned in Britain using British-made explosives. Russell attacked the bill, which he saw as undermined traditional British political liberties to appease a foreign government.{{sfn|Reid|1895|p=290}} On 19 February Russell voted in favour of [[Thomas Milner Gibson|Thomas Milner Gibson's]] motion, which criticised the government for bowing to French demands. When the motion passed by 19 votes Palmerston's government resigned.{{sfn|Prest|2009}}
=== Foreign Secretary under Palmerston: 1859–1865 === {{Further|Liberal government, 1859–1866}} {{See also|United Kingdom and the American Civil War}} In 1859, following another short-lived Conservative government, Palmerston and Russell made up their differences, and Russell consented to serve as [[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]] in a new Palmerston cabinet, usually considered the first true [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] cabinet. This period was a particularly eventful one in the world outside Britain, seeing the [[Unification of Italy]] (the change of British government to one sympathetic to Italian nationalism had a marked part in this process{{sfn|Trevelyan|1909|p=120-123}}), the [[American Civil War]], and the [[Second Schleswig War|1864 war]] over [[Schleswig-Holstein]] between [[Denmark]] and the [[German Confederation|German states]]. Russell arranged the [[London Conference of 1864]], but failed to establish peace in the war. His tenure of the Foreign Office was noteworthy for the famous dispatch in which he defended Italian unification: "Her Majesty's Government will turn their eyes rather to the gratifying prospect of a people building up the edifice of their liberties, and consolidating the work of their independence, amid the sympathies and good wishes of Europe" (27 October 1860).{{sfn|Reid|1895|loc=Ch. 14}}
=== Elevation to the peerage: 1861 === In 1861 Russell was elevated to the peerage as [[Earl Russell]], of [[Kingston Russell]] in the County of [[Dorset]], and as [[Viscount Amberley]], of [[Amberley, Gloucestershire|Amberley]] in the County of Gloucester, and of [[Ardsalla]] in the [[County Meath|County of Meath]] in the [[Peerage of the United Kingdom]].<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=22534 |date=30 July 1861 |page=3193 }}</ref> Henceforth, as a [[suo jure]] peer, rather than merely being known as 'Lord' because he was the son of a Duke, he sat in the House of Lords for the remainder of his career.
== Prime Minister again: 1865–1866<span class="anchor" id="Second premiership"></span><!-- linked from redirects [[Premiership of John Russell, 1st Earl Russell]], [[Premiership of Lord Russell]], [[Premiership of the Earl Russell]], [[Prime ministership of Lord Russell]], [[Prime ministership of the Earl Russell]], [[Second premiership of John Russell]], [[Second prime ministership of John Russell]] --> == {{Further|Liberal government, 1859–1866}} When Palmerston suddenly died in late 1865, Russell again became [[prime minister]]. His second premiership was short and frustrating, and Russell failed in his great ambition of expanding the franchise, a task that would be left to his Conservative successors, Derby and [[Benjamin Disraeli]]. In 1866, party disunity again brought down his government. Russell never again held any office.{{sfn|Cannon|Crowcroft|2015|p=827}}
==Final years and death==
Following the death of their daughter-in-law Viscountess Amberley in 1874 and their son Viscount Amberley in 1876, Earl Russell and Countess Russell brought up their orphaned grandchildren, [[Frank Russell, 2nd Earl Russell|John ("Frank") Russell]], who became 2nd Earl Russell on his grandfather's death, and [[Bertrand Russell]] who would go on to become a noted philosopher and who in later life recalled his elderly grandfather as "a kindly old man in a wheelchair."{{sfn|Clark|2011|loc=Ch. 1}}
Earl Russell died at home at Pembroke Lodge on 28 May 1878. The Prime Minister, the [[Benjamin Disraeli|Earl of Beaconsfield]], offered a public funeral and burial at Westminster Abbey for Russell but this was declined by Countess Russell in accordance with her late husband's wish to be buried among his family and ancestors.<ref>{{Hansard|url=1878/may/31/question-observation|House House of Lords|access-date=24 January 2021}}</ref> He is buried at the [[St Michael's, Chenies#Bedford Chapel|'Bedford Chapel']] at [[St Michael's, Chenies|St. Michael's Church]], [[Chenies]], Buckinghamshire.
== Personal life ==
===Marriages and children=== [[File:Lady John Russell.png|thumb|upright|Russell's first wife Adelaide (1807-1838)]] Russell married Adelaide Lister (widow of [[Thomas Lister, 2nd Baron Ribblesdale]], who had died in 1832{{sfn|Scherer|1999|pp=80–82}}) on 11 April 1835. Together they had two daughters: * Lady Georgiana Adelaide Russell (1836 – 25 September 1922). She married Archibald Peel (son of General [[Jonathan Peel]]) on 15 August 1867. They had seven children. * Lady Victoria Russell (20 October 1838 – 9 May 1880). She married Henry Villiers (the son of The Honorable [[Henry Montagu Villiers]]) on 16 April 1861. They had ten children and left many descendants.{{sfn|Reid|1895|p=}}
Adelaide came down with a fever following the birth of their second child and died a few days later on 1 November 1838. Following her death, Russell continued to raise his late wife's four children from her first marriage, as well their two daughters.
[[File:Frances, Lady John Russell.jpg|thumb|upright|Russell's second wife Frances with their eldest son John]]
On 20 July 1841 Russell remarried, to [[Frances Russell, Countess Russell|Lady Frances ("Fanny") Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound]], daughter of Russell's cabinet colleague [[Gilbert Elliot, 2nd Earl of Minto]]. Together they had four children: * [[John Russell, Viscount Amberley]] (10 December 1842 – 9 January 1876). He married [[Katharine Russell, Viscountess Amberley|The Hon. Katherine Stanley]] on 8 November 1864. They had four children, including a stillborn daughter. Their eldest son, [[Frank Russell, 2nd Earl Russell|Frank]], would succeed Lord John to the title to become the 2nd Earl Russell. Another son, the 3rd Earl, was the philosopher [[Bertrand Russell]]. * Hon. George Gilbert William Russell (14 April 1848 – 27 January 1933). * Hon. [[Rollo Russell|Francis Albert Rollo Russell]] (11 July 1849 – 30 March 1914). He married Alice Godfrey (d. 12 May 1886) on 21 April 1885. They had one son. He remarried Gertrude Joachim on 28 April 1891. They had two children. * [[Lady Agatha Russell|Lady Mary Agatha Russell]] (1853 – 23 April 1933).
In 1847 [[Queen Victoria]] granted [[Pembroke Lodge]] in [[Richmond Park]] to Lord and Lady John. It remained their family home for the rest of their lives.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=135}}<ref name="Fletcher Jones">{{cite book |author= Fletcher Jones, Pamela |date=1972 |title=Richmond Park: Portrait of a Royal Playground |publisher=[[Phillimore & Co Ltd]] |isbn=0-8503-3497-7 |page=41}}</ref>
=== Religious views === Russell was religious in a simple non-dogmatic way and supported "[[broad church]]" stances in the Church of England. He opposed the "[[Oxford Movement]]" because its "Tractarian" members were too dogmatic and too close to [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholicism]]. He supported Broad Churchmen or Latitudinarians by several appointments of liberal churchmen as bishops. In 1859 he reversed himself and decided to free non-Anglicans of the duty of paying rates (taxes) to the local Anglican parish. His political clumsiness and opposition to Church finance made him a target of attack and ridicule in many Church circles.{{sfn|Nikol|1974|pp=341–357}}{{sfn|Ellens|1987|pp=232–249}}{{sfn|Chadwick|1966|pp=129, 146, 479}}
== Legacy and reputation == [[File:John Russell, Vanity Fair, 1869-06-05.jpg|left|thumb|upright=0.95|"The greatest liberal statesman of modern times" - Russell's small stature was frequently lampooned by political caricaturists.]]
Scion of one of the most powerful aristocratic families, Russell was a leading reformer who weakened the power of the aristocracy. His great achievements, wrote [[A. J. P. Taylor]], were based on his persistent battles in Parliament over the years on behalf of the expansion of liberty; after each loss he tried again and again, until finally, his efforts were largely successful.{{sfn|Taylor|1976|p=67}} [[Llewellyn Woodward|E. L. Woodward]], however, argued that he was too much the abstract theorist:
{{blockquote|He was more concerned with the removal of obstacles to civil liberty than with the creation of a more reasonable and civilized society. His political theory centred in the [[Glorious Revolution|revolution of 1688]], and in the clique of aristocratic families to whom the country owed loyalty in return for something like the ''{{lang|fr|[[Charter of 1814|charte octroyée]]}}'' of the reform bill.|source={{harvnb|Woodward |1962|p=100}} }} Nevertheless, Russell led his Whig party into support for reform; he was the principal architect of the [[Reform Act 1832]] ([[2 & 3 Will. 4]]. c. 45).
He was succeeded as Liberal leader by former Peelite [[William Ewart Gladstone|William Gladstone]], and was thus the last true Whig to serve as prime minister. Generally taken as the model for [[Anthony Trollope]]'s Mr. Mildmay, aspects of his character may also have suggested those of [[Plantagenet Palliser]]. An ideal statesman, said Trollope, should have "unblemished, unextinguishable, inexhaustible love of country.... But he should also be scrupulous, and, as being scrupulous, weak."<ref>Quoted in {{harvnb|Kenney|1965|pp=281–285}}</ref>
The [[Reform Act 1832]] and extension of the franchise to British cities are partly attributed to his efforts. He also worked for emancipation, leading the attack on the [[Test Act|Test]] and [[Corporation Act 1661|Corporation acts]], which were repealed in 1828, as well as towards legislation limiting working hours in factories in the [[Factories Act 1847]], and the [[Public Health Act 1848]] ([[11 & 12 Vict.]] c. 63).
His government's approach to dealing with the Great Irish Famine is now widely condemned as counterproductive, ill-informed and disastrous. Russell himself was sympathetic to the plight of the Irish poor, and many of his relief proposals were blocked by his cabinet or by the British Parliament.{{sfn|Scherer|1999|p=158}}
[[Queen Victoria]]'s attitude toward Russell was coloured by his role in the Aberdeen administration. On his death in 1878 her journal records that he was "a man of much talent, who leaves a name behind him, kind, & good, with a great knowledge of the constitution, who behaved very well, on many trying occasions; but he was impulsive, very selfish (as shown on many occasions, especially during Ld Aberdeen's administration) vain, & often reckless & imprudent."
A public house in Bloomsbury, large parts of which are still owned by the Bedford Estate, is named after Russell, located on Marchmont Street.
Earl Russell Street is named after him in [[Aylestone]], a suburb of [[Leicester]].
Russell Road in [[Merton Park]], a suburb of [[London]], is named after him, adjacent to Derby, Gladstone, Palmerston and Pelham Roads, all named after former Prime Ministers.
The town of [[Russell, New Zealand|Russell]] in the [[Northland Region]] of New Zealand, was named in honour of him as the then Secretary of State for the Colonies.
== Literature ==
===Original works===
Russell published numerous books and essays over the course of his life, especially during periods out of office. He principally wrote on politics and history, but also turned his hand to a variety of other topics and genres. His published works include:
* ''The Life of [[William Russell, Lord Russell|William Lord Russell]]'' (1819) - a biography of his famous ancestor.{{sfn|Russell|1820|p=}} * ''Essays and Sketches of Life and Character by a Gentleman who has left his lodgings'' (1820) - a series of social and cultural commentaries ostensibly found in a missing lodger's rooms, published anonymously.{{sfn|Russell|1820b|p=}} * ''An Essay on the History of the English Government and Constitution, from the reign of [[Henry VII of England|Henry VII]]. to the present time'' (1821) * ''The Nun of Arrouca: a Tale'' (1822) - a romantic novel set in Portugal during the Peninsular War. * ''Don Carlos: or, Persecution. A tragedy, in five acts'' (1822) - a blank verse play on the same subject as the [[Don Carlos (play)|play of the same title]] by [[Friedrich Schiller]]. * ''Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe from the [[Peace of Utrecht]]'' (1824) - a second volume appeared in 1829. * ''The Establishment of the Turks in Europe, An Historical Discourse'' (1828) * ''The Causes of the French Revolution'' (1832) [[File:Author of the "Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe." (BM 1859,0625.112).jpg|thumb|upright=1.36|"The Author of Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe" - an illustration of Russell from [[Fraser's Magazine]], 1831]] * ''Adventures in the Moon, and Other Worlds'' (1836) - a collection of [[fantasy literature|fantasy]] short stories, published anonymously. * ''The Life and Times of [[Charles James Fox]]'' (1859-1866) - a three volume biography of Russell's political hero. * ''Essays on the Rise and Progress of the Christian Religion in the West of Europe, from the reign of [[Tiberius]] to the [[Council of Trent]]'' (1871) * ''The Foreign Policy of England 1570-1870, An Historical Essay'' (1871) * ''Recollections and Suggestions 1813-1873'' (1875) - Russell's political memoir.
===As editor===
* ''Correspondence of [[John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford|John, Fourth Duke of Bedford]]'' - in three volumes, published between 1842 and 1846. *''Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence of [[Thomas Moore]]'' - in eight volumes, published between 1853 and 1856. Russell was Moore's literary executor and published his papers in accordance with his late friend's wishes. *''Memorials and correspondence of Charles James Fox'' - in four volumes, published between 1853 and 1857.
===Dedications===
''[[A Tale of Two Cities]]'' by [[Charles Dickens]] was dedicated to Lord John Russell, "In remembrance of many public services and private kindnesses."{{sfn|Dickens|1866|p=iii}} In speech given in 1869, Dickens remarked of Russell that "there is no man in England whom I respect more in his public capacity, whom I love more in his private capacity."{{sfn|Dickens|1906|p=290}}
== Ancestry == {{ahnentafel |collapsed=yes |align=center |boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc; |boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9; |boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc; |boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc; |1= 1. Rt. Hon. '''John Russell, first Earl Russell''' |2= 2. [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford|His Grace John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford]]<ref name="Cokayne, 1895, p. 450">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 6, 1895, p. 450.</ref> |3= 3. Hon. Georgiana Elizabeth Byng<ref name="Cokayne, 1895, p. 450">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 6, 1895, p. 450.</ref> |4= 4. [[Francis Russell, Marquess of Tavistock]]<ref name="Gibbs, 1912, pp. 84-5">Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 2, 1912, pp. 84–5.</ref> |5= 5. Lady Elizabeth Keppel<ref name="Gibbs, 1912, pp. 84-5">Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 2, 1912, pp. 84–5.</ref> |6= 6. [[George Byng, 4th Viscount Torrington|Rt. Hon. George Byng, 4th Viscount Torrington]]<ref name="Cokayne, 1895, p. 450">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 6, 1895, p. 450.</ref> |7= 7. Lady Lucy Boyle<ref name="Cokayne, 1896, p. 411">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 7, 1896, p. 411.</ref> |8= 8. [[John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford|His Grace John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford]]<ref>Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 2, 1912, pp. 83–4.</ref> |9= 9. [[Gertrude Russell, Duchess of Bedford|Lady Gertrude Leveson-Gower]]<ref name="Gibbs, 1912, p. 83">Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 2, 1912, p. 83.</ref> |10= 10. [[Willem van Keppel, 2nd Earl of Albemarle|Rt. Hon. William Anne Keppel, 2nd Earl of Albemarle]]<ref>Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 2, 1912, p. 84.</ref> |11= 11. [[Anne van Keppel, Countess of Albemarle|Lady Anne Lennox]]<ref>Cokayne and Gibbs, ''Complete Peerage'', 2nd ed., vol. 1, 1910, p. 94.</ref> |12= 12. [[George Byng, 3rd Viscount Torrington|Maj.-Gen. Rt. Hon. George Byng, 3rd Viscount Torrington]]<ref name="Cokayne, 1896, p. 411">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 7, 1896, p. 411.</ref> |13= 13. Elizabeth Daniel<ref name="Cokayne, 1896, p. 411">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 7, 1896, p. 411.</ref> |14= 14. [[John Boyle, 5th Earl of Cork|Rt. Hon. John Boyle, 5th Earl of Cork]]<ref name="Cokayne, 1896, p. 411">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 7, 1896, p. 411.</ref> |15= 15. Margaret Hamilton<ref name="Cokayne, 1896, p. 411">Cokayne, ''Complete Peerage'', 1st ed., vol. 7, 1896, p. 411.</ref> }}
==Arms== {{Emblem table | image = Coat of arms of Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell.svg | imagesize = 250px | crest = A goat statant argent, armed and unguled or. | escutcheon = Argent, a lion rampant gules, on a chief sable, three escallops of the field, over the centre escallop a mullet. | supporters = Dexter, a lion gules; sinister, an heraldic antelope gules, armed, unguled, tufted, ducally gorged and chained, the chain reflexed over the back or; each supporter charged on the shoulder with a mullet argent. | orders = The Most Noble Order of the Garter (KG). | motto = ''Che sara sara'' (What must be must be).<ref>{{cite book |title=Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage |pages=1263 |year=1899 |URL=https://ukga.org/browse.php?action=ViewRec&DB=33&bookID=224&pagecount=1403}}</ref> }}
== See also == * [[British Blue Book]] * [[Internationalization of the Danube River]] * {{section link|Confederate States of America#International diplomacy}}
== References == === Notes === {{notelist}}
=== Citations === {{Reflist|30em}}
=== Sources === {{refbegin|2|indent=yes}} * {{cite book|first=Guy|last= Arnold|title=Historical Dictionary of the Crimean War|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_UreS--MoD0C&pg=PA121|year=2002|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=978-0-8108-6613-3}} * {{cite Maclise|Lord John Russell|pages=69-72}} * {{cite book | last=Bryant | first=Chris | title=James and John | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing | date=2024 | isbn=978-1-5266-4497-8}} * {{cite book|last1=Cannon|first1=John |author-link1=John Cannon (historian)|last2=Crowcroft|first2=Robert |title=The Oxford Companion to British History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PM9xCgAAQBAJ&pg=A827|edition=2nd|year=2015|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-967783-2}} * {{cite book|first=Owen |last=Chadwick|title=The Victorian Church|date=1966|url=https://archive.org/details/x-1-victorian-church/page/601/mode/2up?q=russell|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=New York }} * {{cite book|last=Chamberlain|first= Muriel E.|title=Lord Aberdeen: A Political Biography|place=London|date=1983}}*{{cite book|last=Chambers|first=James |title=Palmerston, "The People's Darling"|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Hst1QgAACAAJ|year=2004|publisher=John Murray|isbn=978-0-7195-5452-0}} * {{cite book|last=Clark|first=Ronald |title=The Life of Bertrand Russell|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tFK_zRyCQd4C|year=2011|publisher=Bloomsbury |isbn=978-1-4482-0215-7}} * {{cite book|last=Dickens|first=Charles |author-link=Charles Dickens|title=The Speeches of Charles Dickens, 1841–1870|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XelBAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA290|year=1906|publisher=Chatto & Windus}} * {{cite book|last=Dickens|first=Charles |author-link=Charles Dickens|title=A tale of two cities|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fO1LAAAAcAAJ&pg=PR3|year=1866|publisher=Chapman & Hall}} * {{cite book | last=Egerton | first=Hugh Edward | title=A Short History of British Colonial Policy | publisher=Cambridge University Press | publication-place=Cambridge | date=2010-12-02 | isbn=978-1-108-02375-7}} * {{cite journal|last1=Ellens|first1=J. P.|title=Lord John Russell and the Church Rate Conflict: The Struggle for a Broad Church, 1834–1868|journal=Journal of British Studies|volume=26|issue=2|year=1987|pages=232–257|issn=0021-9371|doi=10.1086/385887|jstor=175503|s2cid=153660971 }} *Norman Gash, ''Mr Secretary Peel'' (1961) pp: 460–65 * Richard A. Gaunt, "Peel's Other Repeal: The Test and Corporation Acts, 1828," ''Parliamentary History'' (2014) 33#1 pp 243–262 * {{cite journal|last=Halevy|first= Elie|title=The Triumph of Reform 1830–1841|journal=History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century|volume=3|date=1950}} detailed political narrative * {{cite journal|last=Halevy|first= Elie|title=Victorian Years|journal=History of the English People in the Nineteenth Century|volume=4|date=1951}} detailed political narrative * {{cite book|last1=Hawkins|first1=Angus|title=The forgotten Prime Minister – the 14th Earl of Derby|volume= I|date=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=New York|isbn=978-0-19-920440-3|edition=1st}} * {{cite journal|last1=Henderson|first1=G. B.|title=IV. The Eclipse of Lord John Russell|journal=Cambridge Historical Journal|volume=5|issue=1|year=2011|pages=60–86|issn=1474-6913|doi=10.1017/S1474691300001220|jstor=3020833}} * {{cite journal|last1=Kenney|first1=Blair G.|title=Trollope's Ideal Statesmen: Plantagenet Palliser and Lord John Russell|journal=Nineteenth-Century Fiction|volume=20|issue=3|year=1965|pages=281–285|issn=0029-0564|doi=10.2307/2932760|jstor=2932760}} * {{cite journal|last=Krein|first= David F.|title=War And Reform: Russell, Palmerston and the Struggle for Power in the Aberdeen Cabinet, 1853–54|journal=Maryland Historian|date=1976|volume= 7#2|ref= pp. 67–84}} * {{citation|title=Ireland since the famine|first=Francis Stewart Leland|last=Lyons| publisher=Fontana|year=1973}} * {{cite journal|last1=Martin|first1=B. K.|title=5. The Resignation of Lord Palmerston in 1853. Extracts from unpublished letters of Queen Victoria and Lord Aberdeen|journal=Cambridge Historical Journal|volume=1|issue=1|year=1923|pages=107–112|issn=1474-6913|doi=10.1017/S147469130000086X|jstor=3020826}} * {{citation |url=https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:fip:fednls:87023|title=Crisis Chronicles: Railway Mania, the Hungry Forties, and the Commercial Crisis of 1847 |last1=Morgan |first1=Donald |last2=Narron |first2=James |publisher=Federal Reserve Bank of New York |date=5 June 2015 |work=Liberty Street Economics|access-date=28 February 2021}} * {{cite journal|first=John|last= Nikol|title=The Oxford Movement in Decline: Lord John Russell and the Tractarians, 1846–1852|journal=Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church|volume= 43|issue=4 |date=1974|pages=341–357}} * {{cite journal|last1=Partridge|first1=M.S.|title=The Russell Cabinet and National Defence, 1846–1852|journal=History|volume=72|issue=235|year=1987|pages=231–250|issn=0018-2648|doi=10.1111/j.1468-229X.1987.tb01463.x|jstor=24416414}} * {{cite book |last=Prest |first=John M. |title=Lord John Russell |publisher=Macmillan |publication-place=London |date=1972 |isbn=978-0-87249-269-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/lordjohnrussell0000pres |url-access=registration}} The major scholarly biography * Prest, John. "The Decline of Lord John Russell." ''History Today'' (June 1972) 22#6 pp 394–401, online; covers 1835 to 1852. * {{cite ODNB|last=Prest|first= John|title=Russell, John, first Earl Russell (1792–1878)|id=24325|date=21 May 2009}} * {{cite journal|last=Prest|first= J. M.|title=Gladstone and Russell|journal=Transactions of the Royal Historical Society|volume=16|pages= 43–63|date=1966|ref= pp. 43–63|doi= 10.2307/3678794|jstor= 3678794|s2cid= 179076799}} * {{cite book|last=Reid|first=Stuart Johnson |title=Lord John Russell|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.32365|year=1895|publisher=J.M. Dent & Sons|location=London}} * {{citation|title=Ireland: History of a Nation|first=David|last=Ross|year=2002|publisher=New Lanark: Geddes & Grosset|isbn=1-84205-164-4|url=https://archive.org/details/irelandhistoryof0000ross}} * {{cite book|last=Russell|first=John |title=The Life of William Lord Russell;: With Some Account of the Times in which He Lived|url=https://archive.org/details/lifewilliamlord01russgoog|edition=3rd|volume= I|year=1820|publisher=Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, ... and James Ridgway}} and [https://archive.org/details/lifewilliamlord02russgoog Volume II] * {{cite book|last=Russell|first=John |title=Essays, and Sketches of Life and Character|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=znlKAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA97|date=1820b|publisher=Clayton & Kingsland and C.S. Van Winkle}} * {{cite journal|last=Saunders|first= Robert|title=Lord John Russell and Parliamentary Reform, 1848–67|journal=English Historical Review|date=2005|volume= 120|issue= 489|pages= 1289–1315|jstor=3491041|doi= 10.1093/ehr/cei332}} * {{cite book|last=Scherer|first=Paul |title=Lord John Russell: A Biography|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=L0xuWohqz3gC|year=1999|publisher=Susquehanna University Press|isbn=978-1-57591-021-5}} * {{cite journal|last=Scherer|first= Paul H.|title=Partner or Puppet? Lord John Russell at the Foreign Office, 1859–1862|journal=Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies|volume= 19|issue= 3|pages= 347–371|date=1987|ref=347–371|jstor=4050465|doi= 10.2307/4050465}} * {{cite book|last=Taylor|first=A.J.P. |author-link=A.J.P. Taylor|title=Essays in English History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1FMKAQAAMAAJ|year=1976|publisher=Penguin|isbn=9780140218626}} * {{cite book|last=Trevelyan|first=George Macaulay |author-link=George Macaulay Trevelyan|title=Garibaldi and the Thousand|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.173220|year=1909|publisher=Longmans}} * {{cite book|first=Tilby A.|last= Wyatt|title=Lord John Russell: A study in civil and religious liberty|place=London|date=1931}} * {{cite journal|last1=Vincent|first1=J. R.|title=The Parliamentary Dimension of the Crimean War|journal=Transactions of the Royal Historical Society|volume=31|year=1981|pages=37–49|issn=0080-4401|doi=10.2307/3679044|jstor=3679044|s2cid=153338264 }} * {{cite book|last1=Walpole|first1=Spencer|title=The Life of Lord John Russell |volume= I|date=1889a|publisher=Longmans, Green & Co|location=London|url=https://archive.org/details/lifelordjohnrus03walpgoog}} * {{cite book|last1=Walpole|first1=Spencer|title=The Life of Lord John Russell |volume= II|date=1889b|publisher=Longmans, Green & Co|location=London|url=https://archive.org/details/lifelordjohnrus02walpgoog}} * {{cite book |last=Woodward |first=Llewellyn |author-link=Llewellyn Woodward |title=The Age of Reform, 1815–1870 |url=https://archive.org/details/ageofreform181510000wood |url-access=registration |year=1962 |publisher=Clarendon Press |isbn=978-0-19-821711-4}} * {{Nuttall|wstitle=Russell, John, Earl|ref=none}} {{refend}}
=== Historiography === {{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} * {{cite journal|last=Beales|first= Derek|title=Peel, Russell and Reform|journal=Historical Journal|date=1974|volume= 17#4|issue= 4|pages= 873–882|ref= pp. 873–882|jstor=2638561|doi= 10.1017/S0018246X00007950|s2cid= 162357955}} * {{Cite EB1911|wstitle= Russell, John Russell, 1st Earl | volume= 23 |last1= Courtney |first1= William Prideaux |author1-link= William Prideaux Courtney | pages = 863–864 |short=1}} * {{cite book|last=Loades|first= David Michael|title=Reader's guide to British history|date=2003|ref=2:1147–49}} {{refend}}
== External links == {{wikisource|works=and}} {{Wikiquote}} {{Commons category}} * {{Gutenberg author|id=42283}} * [https://www.gov.uk/government/history/past-prime-ministers/lord-john-russell-1st-earl-russell Lord John Russell 1st Earl Russell], short biography from the 10 Downing Street website * {{Hansard-contribs | lord-john-russell | Lord John Russell }} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20060108134519/http://www.liberalhistory.org.uk/record.jsp?type=page&ID=105&liberalbiographies=liberalbiographies Lord John Russell 1792–1878] biography from the Liberal Democrat History Group * {{Internet Archive author |sname=John Russell, 1st Earl Russell}} * {{Librivox author |id=8606}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20080825211259/http://www.number10.gov.uk/history-and-tour/prime-ministers-in-history/earl-russell More about Earl Russell] on the Downing Street website * [http://www.pembroke-lodge.co.uk/ Pembroke Lodge] (principal residence and museum) * {{NPG name}}
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[[Richard FitzPatrick]] }} {{s-ttl | title = [[Tavistock (UK Parliament constituency)|Member of Parliament for Tavistock]] | years = [[1813 Tavistock by-election|1813]]–[[1817 Tavistock by-election|1817]] | with = [[Lord William Russell]] }} {{s-aft | after = [[Lord William Russell]] | after2 = [[Lord Robert Spencer]] }} {{s-bef | before = [[Lord William Russell]] | before2 = [[Lord Robert Spencer]] }} {{s-ttl | title = [[Tavistock (UK Parliament constituency)|Member of Parliament for Tavistock]] | years = [[1818 United Kingdom general election|1818]]–[[1820 United Kingdom general election|1820]] | with = [[Lord William Russell]] 1818–1819 | with2 = [[John Peter Grant (MP)|John Peter Grant]] 1819–1820 }} {{s-aft | after = [[John Peter Grant (MP)|John Peter Grant]] | after2 = [[John Nicholas Fazakerley]] }} {{s-bef | before = [[William Henry Fellowes]] | before2 = [[Lord Frederick Montagu]] }} {{s-ttl | title = [[Huntingdonshire (UK Parliament constituency)|Member of Parliament for 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{{s-aft | after = [[John Yarde-Buller, 1st Baron Churston|Sir John Yarde-Buller]] | after2 = [[Montagu Brownlow Parker, 5th Earl of Morley|Montagu Brownlow Parker]] }} {{s-bef | before = [[William Henry Hyett]] | before2 = [[George Julius Poulett Scrope]] }} {{s-ttl | title = [[Stroud (UK Parliament constituency)|Member of Parliament for Stroud]] | years = [[1835 Stroud by-election|1835]]–[[1841 United Kingdom general election|1841]] | with = [[George Julius Poulett Scrope]] }} {{s-aft | after = [[George Julius Poulett Scrope]] | after2 = [[William Henry Stanton (MP)|William Henry Stanton]] }} {{s-bef | before = [[Sir Matthew Wood, 1st Baronet|Sir Matthew Wood]] | before2 = [[George Grote]] | before3 = [[William Crawford (London MP)|William Crawford]] | before4 = [[James Pattison (London MP)|James Pattison]] }} {{s-ttl | title = [[City of London (UK Parliament constituency)|Member of Parliament for City of London]] | years = [[1841 United Kingdom general election|1841]]–[[1861 City of 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