|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: RON-SAC |
|
|
RUSSELL, SIR WILLIAM HOWARD . (1821-1907), English war correspondent, was born at Lilyvale, near Tallaght, in the county of Dublin, on the 28th of March 1821, being one of the $ussells of Limerick, whose settlement in Ireland dates
Cambridge , but left before taking a degree. In the following year he was sent by The Times to Ireland to report the O'Connell meetings. In 1845 he was appointed to superintend the reports on the Irish railways, and was shortly afterwards sent by The Times to inspect the O'Connell property in S.W. Ireland, when his plain speaking drew forth a characteristic tirade from. the " Liberator." For a short period in 1847 his services were temporarily transferred to the Morning Chronicle, but with that exception he remained permanently connected with The Times. He was sent as special
special
Towards the end of May 1855 he accompanied the expedition to Kertch, and did not return to the Crimea until the following August. In September and October he described the attacks on the Malakoff and Redan, the occupation of Sevastopol and the capture of Fort Kinburn. The popularity of The Times Crimea correspondence led to its republication in two volumes under the title of The War, 1855-56. Russell's letters to The Times were mainly responsible for the enlightenment of the public at home as to the conduct of affairs at the scene of action, and his exposure of the mismanagement during the winter of 1854 did more than anything else to cause the downfall of Lord Aberdeen's ministry. In 1856 Russell was sent to Moscow to describe the coronation of the tsar, and in the following year was attached to the headquarters of Lord Clyde in India. He was present at the siege and capture of Lucknow in 1858, the operations in Oude, the battle of Bareilly and the actions in Rohilkhand, and he received the Indian war medal with the Lucknow clasp. The events of those stirring times are vividly recorded in My Diary in India in 1858-59. Next year he was sent to Italy, but arrived on the eve of the armistice at Villa-franca. On the 7th of January 186o appeared the first number of the Army and Navy Gazette
Bull Run, and his account of the Federal retreat drew much hostile criticism. He published a full account of the war, in so far as he had witnessed it, in My Diary, North and South, during the Civil War in America, 1862. Returning to England in 1863, he remained at home until '866, when he proceeded to the headquarters of General Benedek and witnessed the battle of Koniggratz
TT During the interval of peace that followed he accompanied the prince of Wales to the Nile, Constantinople, the Crimea and Greece in 1868, and published an account of the tour in the following year, when he also contested the borough of Chelsea unsuccessfully in the Conservative interest
Sedan
Sutherland
End of Article: RUSSELL, SIR WILLIAM HOWARD If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/RON_SAC/RUSSELL_SIR_WILLIAM_HOWARD.html"> RUSSELL, SIR WILLIAM HOWARD </a> |
|
|
(Previous) RUSSELL, LORD WILLIAM (16391683) |
(Next) RUSSELL, THOMAS (1762-1788) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements