Francis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford
Francis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford PC (
1593–
May 9,
1641), was the only son of
William Russell, 1st Baron Russell of Thornhaugh, to which barony he succeeded in August
1613. For a short time previously he had been
member of parliament for the borough of
Lyme Regis. In
1623 he was made
Lord Lieutenant of Devon and in May
1627 became Earl of Bedford on the death of his cousin, Edward, the 3rd Earl.
When a quarrel broke out between
Charles I and the
parliament, Bedford supported the demands of the
House of Commons as embodied in the
Petition of Right, and in
1629 was arrested for his share in the circulation of Sir Robert Dudley's pamphlet, "Proposition for His Majesty's service," but was quickly released. The
Short Parliament meeting in April
1640 found the earl as one of the king's leading opponents. He was greatly trusted by
John Pym and
Oliver St John, and is mentioned by
Clarendon as among the "great contrivers and designers" in the
House of Lords. In July
1640 he was among the peers who wrote to the Scottish leaders refusing to invite a Scottish army into England, but promising to stand by the Scots in all legal and honourable ways. His signature was afterwards forged by Thomas, Viscount Savile, in order to encourage the Scots to invade England. In the following September he was among those peers who urged Charles to call a parliament, to make peace with the Scots, and to dismiss his obnoxious ministers; and was one of the English commissioners appointed to conclude the treaty of Ripon.
When the
Long Parliament met in November 1640, Bedford was generally regarded as the leader of the parliamentarians. In February
1641 he was made a
privy councillor, and during the course of some negotiations was promised the office of
Lord High Treasurer. He was essentially a moderate man, and seemed anxious to settle the question of the royal revenue in a satisfactory manner. He did not wish to alter the government of the church, was on good terms with
Archbishop Laud, and, although convinced of the guilt of
Strafford, was anxious to save his life. In the midst of the parliamentary struggle Bedford died of smallpox on
May 9 1641.
Clarendon described him as "a wise man, and of too great and plentiful a fortune to wish the subversion of the government," and again referring to his death, said that "many who knew him well thought his death not unseasonable as well to his fame as his fortune, and that it rescued him as well from some possible guilt as from those visible misfortunes which men of all conditions have since undergone."
Bedford was the head of those who undertook to drain the great level of
The Fens of
Cambridgeshire, which were renamed the "
Bedford Level" in his honour. He spent a large sum of money over this work, and received 43,000 acres (174 km²) of land. However, owing to various jealousies and difficulties, the king took the work into his own hands in
1638, making a further grant of land to the earl.
Bedford married Catherine Brydges (d.
1657), daughter of
Giles Brydges, 3rd Baron Chandos. They had eight childen:
*
William Russell, 1st Duke of Bedford (August,
1616 -
September 7,
1700).
*Francis Russell.
*Colonel John Russell.
*Edward Russell (d.
September 21,
1665). Father of
Edward Russell, 1st Earl of Orford.
*Catherine Russell (d.
December 1,
1676). Married
Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke.
*Margaret Russell (d.
1676). Married first
James Hay, 2nd Earl of Carlisle and secondly
Edward Montagu, 2nd Earl of Manchester.
*Diana Russell (d.
30 January,
1695). Married
Francis Newport, 1st Earl of Bradford.
*Anne Russell (d.
26 January,
1697). Married
George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol.