The Earl Russell | |
---|---|
Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal | |
In office 3 February 1970 – 16 December 1987 Hereditary Peerage | |
Preceded by | The 3rd Earl Russell |
Succeeded by | The 5th Earl Russell |
Personal details | |
Born | 16 November 1921 |
Died | 16 December 1987 (aged 66) |
Spouse | Doniphan Lindsay |
Children | 3 |
Parent(s) | Bertrand Russell Dora Black |
Education | Dartington Hall School University of California Harvard University |
John Conrad Russell, 4th Earl Russell (16 November 1921 – 16 December 1987), styled Viscount Amberley from 1931 to 1970, was the eldest son of the philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell (the 3rd Earl) and his second wife, Dora Black. His middle name was a tribute to the writer Joseph Conrad, whom his father had long admired.[1] He was the great-grandson of the 19th-century British Whig Prime Minister Lord John Russell. He succeeded to the earldom on the death of his father on 2 February 1970.
Education
John Russell was educated at the progressive Dartington Hall School, the University of California, Los Angeles and Harvard University. Upon leaving Harvard in 1943 he returned to Britain and enlisted in the Royal Naval Reserve.[2] In the Reserve, he learned the Japanese language.[3]
Career
Russell had a distinguished early career, working for the FAO among other organisations, but in later life he was diagnosed as schizophrenic.[4] This made him the only person in the United Kingdom to be denied the vote on two counts, first, for being a peer and, second, for being insane. He delivered a speech in the House of Lords on 18 July 1978 that was considered so outlandish that to this day it was claimed to be the only speech unrecorded by Hansard, although it is included in the online version[5] while lacking the final section that he had written but failed to read aloud after being interrupted.[6][7]
Personal life
He was married on 28 August 1946 to Susan Doniphan Lindsay, daughter of the poet Vachel Lindsay. They were divorced in 1955. They had three daughters: Lady Felicity Anne Russell (born 2 September 1945), Lady Sarah Elizabeth Russell (born 16 January 1946), and Lady Lucy Catherine Russell (21 July 1948 – 11 April 1975). Neither Sarah nor Lucy married or bore children; Felicity had one daughter, Rowan. Like their father and mother, the three daughters suffered mental health challenges. Lucy, who was Bertrand Russell's favourite grandchild, died from self-immolation, at the age of 26, in the forecourt of a church near Penzance, ostensibly protesting in the cause of world peace.[8] Like her father Lucy was diagnosed with schizophrenia.[4]
Russell was succeeded as Earl by his half-brother, the historian Conrad Russell, 5th Earl Russell.
References
- ↑ Kevin Jackson, Constellation of Genius – 1922: Modernism and All That Jazz, p. 47, footnote 36
- ↑ "RUSSELL, 4th Earl (John Conrad Russell)". Who's Who & Who Was Who. Vol. 2018 (online ed.). A & C Black. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ↑ Russell, Bertrand (1969). Autobiography of Bertrand Russell (1914 - 1944). New York: Bantam Books. p. 327.
- 1 2 Fitzgerald, Michael; Lyons, Viktoria (2005). Asperger Syndrome A Gift Or a Curse?. Nova Biomedical Books. p. 290.
- ↑ at column 275.
- ↑ "Visionary Speech by Earl Russell (Part 3) | Jot101".
- ↑ Great British Eccentrics, SD Tucker
- ↑ Héctor Abad, The Reasoning Heart. Brick Magazine, No. 88 (Winter, 2012). Retrieved 2016-07-05.
Bibliography
- Monk, Ray (2004). "Russell, Bertrand Arthur William, third Earl Russell (1872–1970)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35875. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
External links