Russell, the son of Alexander Russell, farmer, and his wife Christian Ballantyne, was born at the farm of Windydoors,
Selkirkshire, in 1741. He was at school, first, at
Innerleithen,
Peeblesshire, and then for ten months in
Edinburgh, where in 1756 he was apprenticed to a bookseller and printer. When a journeyman Russell joined in 1763 the
Miscellaneous Society, composed of university and other students. His friends revised a translation by him of Crebillon's
Rhadamisthe and Zenobia, which he unsuccessfully submitted to Garrick for representation. He spent the autumn of 1765 with
Patrick Murray, 5th Lord Elibank at his seat in
Midlothian, and presently forsook his trade, trusting to prosper under Elibank's patronage. After a short stay with his father, Russell proceeded to London in 1767 as a man of letters. For a time he was corrector of the press for Strahan, and in 1769 became printing overseer to Messrs. Brown & Adlard, but soon after 1770 appears to have lived exclusively by literary work. In 1780 he visited
Jamaica to secure money as his brother's heir, and on his return prosecuted his literary calling in London with vigour and success. In 1787 Russell married, and retired to Knottyholm, near
Langholm, Dumfriesshire. In 1792 he received the honorary degree of
LL.D. from
St. Andrews University. He died suddenly of paralysis on 25 December 1793, and was buried in the churchyard of Westerkirk, Langholm. His widow, whose maiden name was Scott, and one daughter survived him. ==Bibliography==