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Arthur John Edward Russell


Lord
Arthur John Edward Russell
MP
Russell, Arthur John Edward.jpg
Born 1825
Died 1892
Residence 10 South Audley Street, W.
2 Audley Square, W [1883]
Occupation aristocracy
political
Society Membership
membership Ordinary Fellow - life compounder
left 1892 deceased
elected_AI 1873.03.18



Contents

Notes

Office Notes

AI Council 1875 Member
AI Council 1876 Member
AI Council 1877 Member
AI Council 1878 Member
AI Council 1879 Member
AI Council 1880 Member
AI Council 1881 Member
AI Council 1882 Member
AI Council 1883 Member
AI Council 1884 Member
AI Council 1885 Member
AI Council 1886 Member
AI Council 1887 Member
AI Council 1888 Member

House Notes

1873.03.04 proposed
death noted in Report of Council for 1892
1892.04.26 death announced


Notes From Elsewhere

Lord Arthur John Edward Russell (14 June 1825 – 4 April 1892) was a British Liberal Party politician.
He was born in London on 13 June 1825, the second of three sons of Major-General Lord George William Russell and Elizabeth Anne Rawdon, daughter of the Hon. John Theophilus Rawdon, himself second son of the 1st Earl of Moira. His elder brother was Francis, later 9th Duke of Bedford and his younger brother was Odo, later 1st Baron Ampthill.
He was educated in Germany and from 1849 to 1854 he was private Secretary to his uncle, the Liberal Prime Minister Lord John Russell. Between 1857 and 1885, he sat as Member of Parliament (MP) for Tavistock. He only spoke rarely in the Commons, once in reply to an attack on his brother Odo.
On 25 September 1865, Russell married Laura de Peyronnet, daughter of Paul Louis Jules, Vicomte de Peyronnet. They had six children, Harold Russell, Flora Russell, the diplomat Sir Claud Russell, Caroline Russell, Major Gilbert Russell and Conrad Russell.
He was raised to the rank of a Duke's son on 25 June 1872 and was then known as Lord Arthur Russell.
He was a great clubman and belonged to Brooks's, the Athenaeum, the Cosmopolitan, Grillion's, THE CLUB, and the Metaphysical Society. He was involved in the Senate of the University of London, serving on this body from 1875 to his death.
Russell died on 4 April 1892 at 2 Audley Square, London, and was buried in Brompton Cemetery, London. There is a memorial to him in the 'Bedford Chapel' at St. Michael’s Church, Chenies.
The ideological gulf between Britain and the new German Empire was stressed by Lord Russell in 1872:
Prussia now represents all that is most antagonistic to the liberal and democratic ideas of the age; military despotism, the rule of the sword, contempt for sentimental talk, indifference to human suffering, imprisonment of independent opinion, transfer by force of unwilling populations to a hateful yoke, disregard of European opinion, total want of greatness and generosity, etc., etc."[1]

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