
Col. Charles L. Russell

CHARLES L. RUSSELL
1828 - 1862
DERBY WIDE-AWAKES
DERBY BLUES MILITIA
ANTI-SLAVERY ACTIVIST
COLONEL 10TH REG CT
KILLED ROANOKE ISL.
DERBY'S 1ST CASUALTY
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Charles Lambert Russell was born in Litchfield,
Connecticut on July 25, 1828, the son of Samuel S. Russell and
Miss Angeline Doolittle. He soon moved to the Westville section of
New Haven with his father, who was working in a silver plate factory.
They then moved to Derby when Charles was 12 years old. He was educated
in Derby schools and began working towards a career in the tack-making
trade. In 1851 he married Miss Ann Eliza Mitchell (1830-1912) of
Huntington and they had three children. Based on the 1860 U. S. Census
the family may have lived on the block bordered by Main, Elizabeth,
Third and Minerva Streets in Birmingham borough.
Mr. Russell was a foreman for Edward Nelson Shelton
in his tack factory. Having an interest in military affairs and strong
opposition to slavery, Mr. Russell, when 17 years old, joined the Derby
Blues, a private volunteer military company. He also became a commander
of the pre-civil war movement known as the “Wide-Awakes”. The movement
was organized in Hartford on the night of February 25, 1860 when young
men in capes and with lanterns gathered to safeguard democracy.
Following his brief tenure in the Derby Blues,
Captain Russell enlisted in the 2nd Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. He
became Adjutant on the staff of Alfred Howe Terry (1827-1890), New Haven
resident and Colonel of the 21st Regiment Connecticut Volunteers. The
regiment fought, with distinction, in the first battle of Bull Run on
July 21, 1861 at Manassas, Virginia. The commander of the division,
General Keys, presented Captain Russell with a special commendation for
his coolness and bravery.
Russell came back to Derby after their ninety days of
voluntary service and returned to tack-making. But he soon formed
another volunteer company that he named “The Ellsworth Guard”. Colonel
Elmer Ellsworth of the 11th New York Volunteers was the first Union
officer to be killed in the Civil War. He was shot by an angry innkeeper
on May 24, 1861 when President Lincoln ordered troops to occupy
Alexandria, Virginia following the state’s succession from the Union.
Colonel Russell’s newly formed company was joined to the 8th Regiment of
New Haven. The governor then formally offered Captain Russell the rank
of lieutenant colonel in the 10th Regiment, organized at Hartford. After
rising to the rank of Colonel he served with General Ambrose Everett
Burnside (1824-1881) on a sailing expedition to North Carolina. They
captured Roanoke Island. Leading his regiment, Colonel Russell was
struck by a rifle ball, piercing his shoulder and heart, from a
concealed Confederate sharpshooter and was killed instantly on February
8, 1862.
Colonel Russell’s body was returned to Derby where
his funeral was attended by public officials and military and civic
organizations. He was interred in Oak Cliff Cemetery. His impressive
monument sits at the edge of the cemetery with a spectacular view of the
Housatonic River and dam. Fort Defiance, North Carolina, was
rechristened Fort Russell in his honor. In June of 1862 Colonel Russell
was eulogized in numerous speeches in both the Senate and House of
Representatives of Connecticut. They were compiled and later published
by the legislature. Colonel Russell was only 34 years old when killed.
He was the first regimental commander from Connecticut to fall in battle
and the first casualty from Derby.
Kellogg Post 26 of the GAR in Birmingham borough,
created the Department of Connecticut Charles L. Russell Camp, No. 26,
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW), in February, 1887.
Colonel Russell is enshrined on the Roll of Honor on the Derby-Shelton
Civil War Monument.
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