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Charles Russell [Lord Killowen]
   
Life
1832-1900 [Lord Russell of Killowen]; b. Ballybot [var. Killane DIH],
nr. Newry, Co. Down; ed. Belfast Diocesan Seminary and Vincentian College,
Castleknock; solicitor, 1854; practised in Co. Down and Co. Antrim; studied
at TCD; Lincolns Inns, 1859; m. Ellen, sis. of Rosa Mulholland;
QC, 1872; northern circuit; 1872; MP Dundalk, Independent Liberal, 1880;
South Hackney, 1885, 1886, 1892; vigorous supporter of Home Rule policy;
toasted the health of the Pope and the Queen, the Queen and the
Pope; Gladstones Attorney Gen., 1886, 1892; New Views of
Ireland or Irish Land; Grievances; Remedies (1880); dissuaded Parnell
from suing The Times over Parnellism and Crime (1887-88);
as leading counsel shredded Pigotts evidence at Parnell Commission,
1888-90; advocacy for Britain in Bering Straits dispute, 1893; Grand Order
of St. Michael and St. George; Lord of Appeal and life peer (baron) Lord
Killowen, 1894; first Catholic Chief Justice since Reformation, later
in 1894; presided at trial of Jameson Raiders, 1896; arbitrator with others
at Paris, 1899, to determine boundaries of British Guiana and Venezuala
under treaty of 1897; introduced secret commissions bill to House of Lords,
1900; writings on legal and education questions; brother of Matthew Russsell;
there is a life by Richard Barry OBrien (1901). DNB DIB DIH DUB
OCIL
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Criticism
Life
of Lord Russell of Killowen, by R. Barry OBrien (Nelson n.d.),
port by John Sergeant.
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Notes
Patrick Pearse: When a sleek lawyer, rising step by step
through the most ignoble of all professions, attains to a Lord Chancellorship
or an Attorney Generalship, we confer upon him the freedom of our cities.
This is really a very terrible symptom in contemporary Ireland (From
a Hermitage [1913]; quoted in Declan Kiberd, Inventing Ireland,
1995, p.168.)
Seán de Fréine, The
Great Silence: the study of a relationship between language and nationality
(Cork: Mercier 1978), [H]ad he [OConnell] been born a
generation later, and been deprived of that tradition, Ireland would hardly
have had the benefit of his great talents. Possibly he, and not Lord Russell
of Killowen, would have been the first Catholic Irishman to become Lord
Chief Justice of England. (p.84.)
Dictionary of National Biography nephew of Charles William
Russell (1812-1880), President of Maynooth and participant in Tractarian
movement. DIH notes that he was counsel to Mrs. OShea in the case
of her aunts legacy.
Belfast Public Library holds Life,
by R. B. OBrien (1904)
Portraits: Charles William Russell, DD, (1812-1880) Maynooth, oil,
f. Gagliardi 1883; see Anne Crookshank, Irish Portraits Exhibition (Belfast:
Ulster Museum 1965).
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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