Francis Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford

Politician from the United Kingdom
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroPolitician from the United Kingdom
A.K.A.Francis Charles Hastings Russell Francis Russell
A.K.A.Francis Charles Hastings Russell Francis Russell
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasPolitician Agronomist
Work fieldScience Politics
Gender
Male
Birth16 October 1819, London, UK
Death14 January 1891London, UK (aged 71 years)
Star signLibra
Politics:Liberal Party
Family
Mother:Elizabeth, Lady William Russell
Father:Lord George Russell
Siblings:Odo Russell, 1st Baron Ampthill Lord Arthur Russell
Spouse:Elizabeth Russell, Duchess of Bedford
Children:George Russell, 10th Duke of Bedford Herbrand Russell, 11th Duke of Bedford Lady Ella Monica Sackville Russell Lady Ermyntrude Sackville Russell
The details

Biography

Francis Charles Hastings Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford KG (16 October 1819 – 14 January 1891) was an English politician and agriculturalist.

Life

Francis Charles Hastings Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford; Sir Robert Nigel Fitzhardinge Kingscote; George William John Repton by Camille Silvy
Garter encircled arms of Francis Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford, KG, as displayed on his Order of the Garter stall plate in St. George's Chapel.

Known as Hastings, the 9th Duke was born in Curzon Street, London, the son of Major-General Lord George William Russell and Lady William Russell, and the grandson of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford. He was commissioned into the Scots Fusilier Guards in 1838, retiring in 1844. He was Liberal Member of Parliament for Bedfordshire from 1847 until 1872, when he succeeded to the dukedom on the death of his cousin William Russell, 8th Duke of Bedford, and took his place in the House of Lords. In 1886, he broke with the party leadership of William Ewart Gladstone over the First Irish Home Rule Bill and became a Unionist.

He took an active interest in agriculture and experimentation on his Woburn Abbey estate and was President of the Royal Agricultural Society in 1880. On 1 December 1880, he was made a Knight of the Garter. From 1884 until his death he was Lord Lieutenant of Huntingdonshire.

He died in 1891, aged 71 at 81 Eaton Square, London, by shooting himself as a result of insanity, while suffering from pneumonia. After being cremated at Woking Crematorium, his ashes were buried at the Bedford Chapel of St. Michael's Church in Chenies, Buckinghamshire.

Family

He married Lady Elizabeth Sackville-West, daughter of George Sackville-West, 5th Earl De La Warr, on 18 January 1844. They had four children:

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