Charles Wells Russell (July 22, 1818 – November 22, 1867) was a prominent Virginia lawyer and politician. He supported the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War, serving as one of Virginia's delegates to the Provisional Confederate Congress and then the First and Second Confederate Congresses, although his home area seceded from the Commonwealth and became West Virginia during that war.[1]

Charles Wells Russell
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
from the Ohio County district
In office
December 2, 1850 – December 3, 1853
Preceded byJames Sanders Wheat
Succeeded byThomas M. Gally
Member of the Provisional Confederate House of Representatives from Virginia
In office
July 1861 – February, 1862
Member of the Confederate House of Representatives from Virginia
In office
February 1862 – March 1865
Personal details
Born(1818-07-22)July 22, 1818
Tyler County, Virginia, US
DiedNovember 22, 1867(1867-11-22) (aged 61)
Baltimore, Maryland, US
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery, Baltimore, Maryland
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMargaret M. Russell
EducationStaunton Academy
Alma materUniversity of Virginia
ProfessionPolitician, lawyer

Early and family life

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Born in Tyler County, Virginia (now Tyler County, West Virginia), which his grandfather helped found. He was educated at the Linsly Institute and then went to Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, graduating from Jefferson College. He read law under Z. Jacob in Wheeling and passed his bar exam.[2]

Charles married Margaret Wilson Moore in 1842; and in 1850 they lived with iron manufacturer Henry Moore in Wheeling (Third Ward).[3] They had two (perhaps three?, Edward Oldham Russell) sons, Henry Moore Russell (1851-1915) and Charles Wells Russell Jr. (1856-1927) (U.S. diplomat, 1909–1914).[4]

Career

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Russell became a prominent lawyer in Wheeling, which was then Virginia's second largest city. With U.S. Attorney General Reverdy Johnson (who was acting in a private capacity) and other Virginia lawyers including James Paull and Alexander H. H. Stuart, Russell defended the Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Company in litigation brought by Edwin M. Stanton and Robert J. Walker following construction of the Wheeling Suspension Bridge across the Ohio River beginning in 1849. Although the company twice technically lost in the United States Supreme Court in the lawsuit brought by upriver rivals in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Russell's legislative advocacy also proved crucial. The longest single span wire suspension bridge to cross a major Western river (and the longest in the world at the time) was never demolished, and was even rebuilt after damage in a May 1854 windstorm (probable tornado).[5]

In 1850, Ohio County voters elected Russell to the Virginia House of Delegates. He was at first their only delegate (a part-time position) but after The Virginia Constitution of 1851 increased representation for western counties, he served alongside Chester D. Hubbard and John M. Oldham. However, in 1853, Ohio County voters instead elected John C. Campbell and Thomas M. Gally (who would in turn be ousted by James Paull, John Brady and T.L. Crammer).[6]

Russell was an elector in the 1860 presidential election supporting Democratic candidate John C. Breckinridge.[7] After Virginia's secession in mid-1861, West Virginia voters who refused to remain loyal to the Union (generally volunteers in Confederate camps) elected Russell to the Provisional Confederate Congress where he served from July 1861 until February 1862), and then to the First Confederate Congress and the Second Confederate Congress, where he served from February 1862 until March 1865.[8] His former co-counsel James Paull and co-delegate Chester D. Hubbard remained loyal to the Union and helped found West Virginia.

Death and legacy

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Russell died on November 22, 1867.

His son Charles Wells Russell became a U.S. Assistant Attorney General and U.S. Minister to Persia.[9]

References

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  1. ^ http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/russell2.html The Political graveyard
  2. ^ West Virginia Prominent Men, available online at ancestry.com citing George W. Atkinson vol 1-11 (1980)
  3. ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census for Ohio County District 44, family 1871, dwelling 1797)
  4. ^ 1860 U.S. Federal Census for Wheeling Ward 3, Ohio County Virginia family no. 1865. The census indicates the Russell family included three live-in Irish domestic servants and 1 female slave (("Kazziah Cary", 24 y.o.); and Charles Russell owned $9000 worth of personal property, which would include slaves. However, Russell does not appear among the slaveowner names in either of the 2-page slave schedules for Wheeling, Ohio County, Virginia in 1850 (District 44, Ohio County) nor in 1860. Ancestry.com has revised its digital organization of the 1850 and 1860 slave schedules, making recognition of slave ownership by persons with common surnames difficult, and slaves could have been leased and counted in the census in other western Virginia counties.
  5. ^ Elizabeth Brand Monroe, The Wheeling Bridge Case (Boston:Northeastern University Press 1992) pp. 79, 102,
  6. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 445, 450
  7. ^ Philadelphia Press, August 20, 1860.
  8. ^ Leonard pp. xxix, xxx
  9. ^ "Ohio County, West Virginia Biographies". West Virginia Genealogy Trails. Retrieved 4 March 2016.