- For the M.P. murdered in 1840, see Lord William Russell.
William Russell, Lord
Russell (29 September 1639 – 21 July 1683), was an
English
politician. He was
a leading member of the
Country
Party, forerunners of the
Whig, who opposed the succession of
James II during the reign of
Charles II, ultimately
resulting in his execution for treason.
Early life and marriage
Russell was the third son of
William Russell, 5th Earl
of Bedford later created Duke of Bedford, and
Lady Anne Carr. His maternal grandfather was
Robert Carr, 1st Earl
of Somerset. After the death of his elder brother
Francis (1638--1679), he was
known by the courtesy title
Lord
Russell.
He and
Francis were at Cambridge University
in 1654. They then travelled abroad, visiting Lyon
and Geneva
, and
residing for a time at Augsburg
.
Russell's account is noted for its colorful depiction of their
travels.
The two made their way to Paris by 1658, and
had returned to Woburn
by December 1659.
At the
Restoration in 1660, when
Charles II took the throne,
Russell was elected as a Member of Parliament for the borough of
Tavistock, a
seat traditionally held by a member of his family. For many years,
Russell appears not to have been active in public affairs, but to
have indulged in court intrigue, and is not recorded as speaking
until 1674. In 1663 and 1664 he was engaged in two
duels; he was wounded in the second one. In 1669, at
age 30, he married Rachel (1636–1723), second daughter of
Thomas Wriothesley,
4th Earl of Southampton, and widow of
Lord Vaughan (c. 1639-1667),
elder son of
Richard Vaughan, 2nd Earl
of Carbery. He thus became connected with
Anthony Ashley
Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, who had married Southampton's
niece. They had a close and affectionate marriage. She corresponded
with
John Tillotson and other
distinguished men, and a collection of her letters was published in
1773.
Parliament

Lord William Russell
It was not until the formation of the country party (the
fore-runner of the Whig party),, which opposed the policies of the
Cabal (an inner group of advisers to the king) and
Charles II's Franco-Catholic policies,
that Russell began to take an active part in affairs. With a
passionate hatred for and distrust of Catholics, and an intense
love of political liberty, he opposed persecution of Protestant
Dissenters. His first speech in
Parliament appears to have been on 22 January 1674, when he
inveighed against the
Stop of the
Exchequer, the
attack on the
Smyrna fleet, the corruption by French money of Charles'
courtiers, and the ill-intended ministers of the king. He also
supported the proceedings against the
Duke of Buckingham.
In 1675, Russell moved an address to the king for the removal from
royal councils and impeachment of the
Earl of Danby.
On 15 February 1677, in the debate on the 15 months'
prorogation (being an extremely lengthy period
between sessions of Parliament), he moved the dissolution of
Parliament; and in March 1678
he seconded the address asking the king to declare war against
France. The enmity of the country party towards
James, the Duke of York, and towards
Danby, and the party's desire for a dissolution and the disbanding
of the army, were greater than the party's enmity towards
Louis. The French king therefore found
it easy to form a temporary alliance with Russell,
Holles and the opposition leaders. They sought
to cripple the king's power of hurting France and to compel him to
seek Louis's friendship; that friendship, however, was to be given
only on the condition that Louis support their goals. Russell
entered into close communication with the
Marquis
de Ruvigny (Lady Russell's maternal cousin), who came over with
money for distribution among members of parliament. By the
testimony of
Barillon, however, it is
clear that Russell himself refused to take any French
payments.
The alarms which culminated in the "discovery" in 1678 of the
Popish Plot to murder
King Charles II and replace him
with James, his Roman Catholic brother, appear to have affected
Russell more than his otherwise sober character would have led
people to expect. Russell threw himself into the party which looked
to
Monmouth, the
(illegitimate but recognized) son of Charles, as the representative
of
Protestant interests, a grave
political blunder, though Russell afterwards was in confidential
communication with
Orange.
Exclusion debates
On 4 November 1678, Russell moved an address to the king to remove
the Duke of York from his person and councils, including removal
from the line of succession. Parliament's insistence on the
impeachment of Danby led to it being progrpued on 30 December and
dissolved in January. At the ensuing election, Russell was again
elected to Parliament, this time as a representative for
Bedfordshire, as
well as for
Hampshire (for which
he chose not to sit). The success of the new Whig party in the
elections of 1679 led to Danby being overthrown, and in April 1679
Russell became a member of the new
Privy Council Ministry formed by
Charles on the advice of
Temple. Only six days after
this, Russell moved for a committee to draw up a bill to secure
religion and property in case of a popish successor, rather than
advocating his exclusion from the succession. In June 1679, on the
occasion of the
Covenanters rising in
Scotland, he attacked
Lauderdale personally
in full council.
In January 1680, Russell, along with
Cavendish,
Capell,
Powle, and
Essex, tendered his
resignation to the king, which was received by Charles "with all my
heart."
On
June 16, he accompanied Shaftesbury when the latter indicted James
at Westminster as a popish recusant; and on October 26, he took the
extreme step of moving to suppress popery and prevent a popish
successor; while on November 2, now at the height of his influence,
he went still further by seconding the motion for exclusion in its
most emphatic shape, and on the 19th carried the exclusion bill to
the House of
Lords
. He opposed the limitation scheme on the
ground that monarchy under its conditions would be an absurdity.
Laurence Echard (
History of
England, ii.) stated that he opposed the indulgence shown by
Charles to
Lord
Stafford (dispensing with the more horrible parts of the
sentence of death — an indulgence afterwards shown to Russell
himself), but this is disputed. On 18 December, he moved to refuse
supplies until the king passed the
Exclusion Bill. The
Prince of Orange having come over at
this time, the opposition leaders were open to a compromise on the
exclusion question. Russell, however, refused to give way.
On 26
March 1681, in the parliament held at Oxford
, Russell
again seconded the Exclusion Bill. Upon the dissolution of
parliament, he retired into privacy at his country seat of
Stratton in Hampshire. It was probably at his wish
that his chaplain wrote the
Life of Julian the Apostate,
in reply to
Dr Hickes's sermons,
defending the lawfulness of resistance in extreme cases.
Rye House Plot
He had no share in the schemes of Shaftesbury after the election of
Tory sheriffs for London in 1682; upon the 1683 violation of the
charters, however, he began seriously to consider the best means of
resisting the government. In October 1682, he (with Monmouth, Essex
and attended a meeting at which what might be construed as
treason was talked. Monmouth, Essex,
Hampden,
Sidney,
Howard of
Escrick and
Sir Thomas
Armstrong were at this meeting at the house of one Sheppard, a
wine merchant. There they met
Richard
Rumbold, the owner of .
This was
followed by the Rye House Plot, a
plan to ambush Charles II and his brother James at the Rye House,
Hoddesdon
, on their way back to London from the Newmarket
races. However the plot was disclosed to the
government.
Unlike several of his co-conspirators,
Russell refusing to escape to Holland
. He
was accused of promising his assistance to raise an insurrection
and bring about the death of the king. He was sent on 26 June 1683
to the Tower of London, where he prepared himself for his death.
Monmouth offered to return to England and be tried if doing so
would help Russell, and Essex refused to abscond for fear of
injuring his friend's chance of escape. However, he was tried and
convicted of treason, the death sentence being commuted to
beheading.
Execution
_by_George_Noble_borderless.jpg/180px-Lord_W._Russell's_last_interview_with_his_family'_(William_Russell,_Lord_Russell)_by_George_Noble_borderless.jpg)
18th century artist's impression of
Russell's last interview with his family before his
execution.
Russell
was executed by Jack Ketch on 21 July
1683 at Lincoln's Inn
Fields
. The execution was said to have been
conducted quite poorly by Ketch. Ketch later wrote a letter of
apology. Russell was lauded as a martyr by the Whigs, who claimed
that he was put to death in retaliation for his efforts to exclude
James from succession to the crown. Russell was exonerated by the
reversal of
attainder under
William III of England.
References
- , but had been substantially amended