Born at St Andrew's Church, Somerset Road,
Cape Town, to
The Reverend J.M. Russell and his wife Nancy, Russell attended Normal College,
Merchiston Castle School, Scotland, and the
South African College,
Cape Town. At the South African College he obtained a double degree in Arts and Science and was awarded the Ebden Scholarship to study overseas for three years.
General Jan Smuts had obtained the same scholarship three years previously. He went first to
St John's College, Cambridge, where he gained a first class Law Degree in 1900, and secondly to the
Middle Temple, London, to study law. Russell was called to the
Middle Temple bar in 1901 and later that same year was admitted to the South African Bar. From 1902 to 1915 he was editor of the Supreme Court Reports of the
Cape Colony and
Union of South Africa before his elevation to the bench in
Southern Rhodesia. Russell married Winifred Robertson in 1904 and together they had two daughters and two sons. ==References==