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Home North Carolina Onslow County City of Belgrade Historical Markers D. L. Russell
     

D. L. Russell

US 17, Belgrade, NC, USA
  North Carolina State Historical Marker
 
    North Carolina State
Historical Marker
    Marker Text:
"Governor, 1897-1901; member Congress 1879-1881; Superior Court judge at 23; home six, grave three miles S."
     Daniel Lindsay Russell, Jr. (1845-1908) was elected to office by the uneasy “Fusion” alliance of Republicans and Populists in the bitter and racially charged election of 1896. The “Maverick Republican” was the son of Daniel Lindsay and Caroline Sanders Russell, born on August 7, 1845, at Winnabow plantation in Brunswick County. At age six, he went to live at Palo Alto, the Onslow County home of his grandfather. Educated first by private tutors, Russell at age twelve left to study at the Bingham School in Orange County. Three years later he entered the University of North Carolina; the war cut short his education. In 1862 he returned to Brunwick County to form an artillery unit. His military career ended when he barely escaped a court-martial for beating a fellow officer. Daniel L. Russell married a cousin, Sarah Amanda Sanders, in 1869; they had no children. Russell’s Brunswick home, a five-bay, two-story frame structure built largely from materials taken from the nearby home of colonial governor Nathaniel Rice, is extant though in some disrepair.

     Russell was nineteen when he was elected in 1864 to the first of two terms in the state House. With the advent of Radical Reconstruction, Russell sided with the new Republican regime and won election as a Superior Court judge, remaining in that position for six years. While Russell maintained a law office in Wilmington, his residence was in Brunswick County from which he was returned to the legislature in 1876. Two years later he entered the Third District Congressional race and served a single term. He did not seek re-election in 1880 and returned to his law practice. Out of political office and doubtful of returning, Daniel Russell often spoke candidly. He castigated the Democrats for their unabated use of the racial issue, charging that blacks had been innocent victims of white barbarity.

     By the early 1890s agrarian unrest and economic depression split the state’s Democratic Party. The schism widened, giving the Republicans a long awaited opportunity. An alliance with Populists resulted in victories in 1896 that removed control of the legislature from the Democrats and placed Republican Russell in the governor’s office. A number of advances were made during Russell’s administration: the Railroad Commission gave way to a Corporate Commission; a new law provided for popular election of the Commissioner of Agriculture; and a Department of Insurance was established. Some of the greatest gains came in education: an 1897 law restored the office of county superintendent; school districts were required to vote on local school taxes until approved; and a legislative appropriation of $50,000 aided school districts in complying with the tax law.

     One of Russell’s greatest disappointments stemmed from his inability to recover the North Carolina Railroad from its lease to the Southern Railway. Bipartisan support for the lease and the influence of railroad tycoon J. P. Morgan forced Russell to abandon his efforts. Frustration followed disappointment in the last two years of his term as a reorganized Democratic Party resurrected the racial issue in 1898 and staged the “Red Shirt” campaign, capturing the legislature and many state offices. The Democrats virtually negated any gubernatorial powers, witness Russell’s ineffectiveness in using state troops to quell the “race riot” in Wilmington. Further insult followed when Russell was forced to accept the “Grandfather Clause” effectively prohibiting blacks from voting.

     Not only was Russell’s political career over in 1901 but the failure of his farms had drained his financial resources. He returned to Belville in Brunswick County to try to recoup his losses, resting his hopes on speculation in repudiated state bonds. The scheme was a failure and, at his death on May 14, 1908, his estate cleared only $1,000. Russell is buried in a family plot at Belgrade in Onslow County.


References:
Lawrence Lee, The History of Brunswick County, North Carolina (1980)
Joseph Parsons Brown, The Commonwealth of Onslow (1960)
Jeffrey J. Crow and Robert F. Durden, Maverick Republican in the Old North State: A Political Biography of Daniel L. Russel (1977)
Carolina Cultivator (April 1855), 59-60—description of Russell plantation
Survey and Planning Branch files, State Historic Preservation Office, North Carolina Office of Archives and History
Daniel L. Russell Papers, North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh
Daniel L. Russell Papers, Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill