Russell Benjamin Harrison Explained

Russell B. Harrison
Office:Member of the Indiana Senate
Term Start:January 8, 1925
Term End:January 5, 1933
Office1:Member of the
Indiana House of Representatives
from Marion County
Term Start1:January 6, 1921
Term End1:January 8, 1925
Office2:U.S. Consul to Portugal
Term Start2:1919
Term End2:1927
President2:Woodrow Wilson
Warren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Office3:U.S. Consul to Mexico
President3:Theodore Roosevelt
William H. Taft
Woodrow Wilson
Warren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Term Start3:1908
Term End3:1927
Office4:Inspector General of Puerto Rico
Term Start4:1898
Term End4:1901
Predecessor4:Office established
Birth Name:Russell Benjamin Harrison
Birth Date:12 August 1854
Birth Place:Oxford, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Profession:Lawyer, diplomat, politician
Alma Mater:Pennsylvania Military Academy
Lafayette College
Party:Republican
Relatives:Harrison family of Virginia
Allegiance:United States
Branch:United States Army
Rank:Major
Lieutenant colonel
Battles:Spanish–American War

Russell Benjamin Harrison (August 12, 1854 – December 13, 1936), also known as Russell Lord Harrison, was a businessman, lawyer, diplomat, and politician. Harrison was the son of U.S. President Benjamin Harrison and Caroline Harrison, and a great-grandson of U.S. President William Henry Harrison.

Life

Born in Oxford, Ohio, Harrison grew up in Indianapolis, Indiana, where his father had a successful law practice. Harrison graduated from the Pennsylvania Military Academy and in 1877 graduated from Lafayette College where he took courses in mining and engineering. In 1878, his grandfather John Scott Harrison was exhumed from his grave and hung by his neck in a tree near the Ohio Medical College. Harrison oversaw communication with newspapers during the incident.[1]

At the end of 1878, he moved to Helena, Montana, where he took a job in the U.S. Assay Office with the help of his father who was then a United States senator. During his time there, he met and married May Saunders, the daughter of ex-Governor and ex-Senator Alvin Saunders of Nebraska, on January 10, 1884. The couple had two children, William Henry and Marthena. In 1885 the family moved briefly to New York City, but had returned to Montana by 1890 when Harrison purchased the Helena Daily Journal. He became estranged from his father following the latter's remarriage to a much younger woman, Russell Harrison's first cousin Mary Scott Lord Dimmick.

Using the wealth, Russell Harrison invested in the Austin and Northwestern Railway, public transportation systems in Richmond and Muncie, Indiana, and engaged in land speculation in Montana. In 1894, he moved to Terre Haute, Indiana as president of the Terre Haute Street Railway Company, which he reorganized into the Terre Haute Electric Street Railway Company. His son, also named William Henry Harrison III – who later became a United States Representative for Wyoming – was born in Terre Haute in 1896. During the late 1890s, he was admitted to the bar.

With the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, Harrison was commissioned as a major and inspector general in May 1898. He served in the force that occupied Puerto Rico and later became inspector general of Puerto Rico.[2] He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in January 1900, and finally discharged in December of the same year.[3] After the war he moved his family to Indianapolis, where he set up a law office.

By right of his service in the Spanish–American War, as well as his descent from President and Major General William Henry Harrison, Harrison became a companion of the Military Order of Foreign Wars. He also became a companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States in succession to his father. In 1891 he became an early member of the District of Columbia Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.

In 1908 he returned to public service, serving as consul to Mexico until 1927, and doubling as the consul to Portugal from 1919 to 1927. He first entered politics in 1921, serving two two-year terms in the Indiana House of Representatives. In 1924 he was elected to the Indiana State Senate where he served two four-year terms. He died of a heart attack in Indianapolis on December 13, 1936. He was the last surviving child of Benjamin and Caroline Harrison.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Russell B. Harrison Collection, 1880–1908, Collection Guide. Indiana Historical Society. 2012-11-02.
  2. News: Lieut. Col. Russell B. Harrison. . The Scranton tribune. . Scranton, PA . Chronicling America Library of Congress . 26 April 1900 . 2151-4038 . 22 December 2022.
  3. https://archive.org/stream/historicalregist01heitrich#page/504/mode/2up Historical Register & Dictionary of the US Army