RICHARD MANNING RUSSELL  Russell

RICHARD MANNING RUSSELL

Russell, Richard Manning (1891-1977), a Representative from Massachusetts; born in Cambridge, Middlesex, Mass., March 3, 1891; attended the Middlesex School, Concord, Mass.; graduated from Harvard University, 1914 and from Harvard Law School, 1917; during the First World War served from August 15, 1917, as a second lieutenant in the Three Hundred and Third Field Artillery and as a first lieutenant and communications officer of the One Hundred and Fifty-first Field Artillery Brigade, with service in France, and was discharged on February 20, 1919; was admitted to the bar in 1919 and commenced practice in Boston, Mass.; member of the Cambridge City Council in 1926 and 1927; mayor of Cambridge 1930-1935; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fourth Congress (January 3, 1935-January 3, 1937); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1936 to the Seventy-fifth Congress, for election in 1950 to fill a vacancy in the Eighty-first Congress, and for election in 1950 to the Eighty-second Congress; resumed the practice of law in Boston, Mass.; resided in Essex, Mass., where he died February 27, 1977; interment in Pine Hill Cemetery, Tewksbury, Mass.
Mother: Margaret Manning Swan
Father: William Eustis Russell
Spouse: Helen Munson b. abt 1890 in Pennsylvania
Children:
Oliva M Russell b. abt 1918 Massachusetts
Helen Russell b. abt 1921 Massachusetts
Margarete M Russell b. abt 1923 Massachusetts
Annie E Russell b. abt 1927 Massachusetts

Sources:
United States Federal Census
Vital Records
The Political Graveyard

Submitted by Deborah Crowell