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A MAN and HIS WORK:
The Life Story of Archdeacon James Solomon Russell
(1857-1935)
Founder of the St. Paul Normal and Industrial School (Now Saint Paul’s College)
By ROBERTA ARNOLD
James
Solomon Russell was born on the Hendrick estate, Mecklenburg County, Virginia
on December 20, 1857, four years prior to the outbreak of the Civil War. His
parents were slaves, his maternal grandmother having been sold in Palmer
Springs shortly after her arrival from Africa. She and her daughter Seleah
worked in the "Big House." Seleah had four daughters and two sons.
One of these daughters, Araminta, was the mother of James Solomon Russell.
Solomon Russell, his father, was a slave on the Russell plantation, Warren
County, North Carolina, and as his parents were separated, paternal
companionship was denied until after the Civil War when his parents joined each
other and began the struggle of making a home.
Archdeacon Russell was
married December 20, 1882 to Virginia Mimigan Morgan, fourth daughter of the
Honorable Peter C. Morgan of Petersburg, Virginia. Mrs. Russell was a real
helpmate in every sense of the word. God blessed this union with five children,
two sons and three daughters. The eldest child, Araminta, served as registrar
of Saint Paul's College until her death,
June 30th, 1937. James Alvin, the elder son, was elected principal of the
school by the Board of Trustees following the resignation of his father in
1929, and in 1936 was made president by action of that same body. Archdeacon
Russell died in the president's home on the St. Paul's Campus, March 28th, 1935,
after an illness of long duration
Educational Training
Archdeacon Russell's
boyhood was one of hardship and privation. His newly emancipated parents, left
to fight their own battles and live their own lives, found the new experience
an arduous one and had to call upon the lad to perform many duties of the farm
and share the burden of earning his "daily bread." Araminta Russell,
herself completely uneducated was determined that her son (whom she named Solomon,
not so much because it was his father's name, as "because she hoped he
would be wise") get as much education as possible. His formal schooling
was often interrupted because there was no money and his help was needed on the
farm. But she would never let him become discouraged, and as soon as the burden
became lighter, she would start him back to school again.
As a student he showed
marked ability. His keen mind attracted the attention of the visiting
superintendent, who called the boy aside and advised him to try to go to
Hampton. This sudden and surprising advice was eagerly related to his parents
who were greatly pleased and willing for the boy to try. More time than ever
was devoted to the farm during the summer, and in the fall of 1874, with $22 in
the pocket of his first suit (spun by his grandmother and made by his mother)
he arrived on the campus of Hampton Normal and Industrial Institute. In spite
of the fact that he worked hard, both at school and during vacations, to help
defray his expenses, he was compelled twice to leave Hampton because of lack of
funds. Though discouraged, he did not despair and determinedly stuck to his
frequently interrupted studies.
Decides to Prepare for the
Ministry
When Archdeacon
Russell was a lad people would frequently say to his Mother, "that boy
will some day become a good preacher." This pleased her very much and
fulfillment of this prophecy was ever in her mind as she deprived herself in
order to keep him in school. Another vital influence in the shaping of his life
was Mr. John E. P. Wright, superintendent of the white Sunday School at Palmer
Springs. Mr. Wright became interested in the colored boys and girls and started
a Sunday School for them. James Solomon Russell and his two cousins were the
first pupils. After three years of close contact as teacher Mr. Wright
recommended that young Russell take over the job of teaching the Sunday School
and succeed him as Superintendent. Stumbling across the Apostle's Creed, and
later finding an old Book of Common Prayer, he became interested in the
Episcopal service and when he decided to enter the ministry made up his mind to
serve in the Episcopal Church.
With no knowledge of
how he should prepare himself for the priesthood he took his problem to Mrs.
Pattie E. Buford of Lawrenceville. Mrs. Buford was deeply interested in
missionary work among colored people and referred his case to The Rt. Rev. F.
M. Whittle, Bishop of the undivided Diocese of Virginia. Bishop Whittle
directed the Rev. Robert White to go to Hampton to find out what he could about
the young aspirant, and later appointed a commission to meet with him and
formulate plans for his future training. This commission decided to give him an
opportunity for preparation by starting a branch of the Theological Seminary of
Virginia at St. Stephen's Church, Petersburg, Virginia. This "branch"
became the Bishop Payne Divinity School for the training of colored men for the
Episcopal priesthood.
During
the four years spent in Petersburg Archdeacon Russell was under the direct
guidance of Rev. Giles Buckner Cooke, rector of St. Stephen's Church, a former
major in the Army of the Confederacy. This teacher-student relationship was the
beginning of a golden friendship between the two men. So strong were the bonds
of friendship that Major Cooke on many occasions publicly expressed the desire
that the Archdeacon officiate at his funeral. As the Major outlived the
Archdeacon the Rev. J. Alvin Russell, elder son of the Archdeacon, then
president of the school, was asked to serve in his father's stead.
Ordained to the Diaconate
After four profitable
years at Petersburg, his formal student days were ended and on March 9, 1882
James Solomon Russell was ordained to the diaconate of the Episcopal Church by
the Bishop of the undivided Diocese of Virginia, the Rt. Rev. F. M. Whittle,
who four years previously had opened the way for the Archdeacon's training.
Bishop Whittle appointed him as missionary to Brunswick and Mecklenburg
Counties, and on March 16th, 1882, at the age of twenty-four, James Solomon
Russell reached Lawrenceville, Virginia to assume his duties. It is interesting
to note that it was at Lawrenceville that he had met the Commission, which
under the direction of Bishop Whittle, had been responsible for the opportunity
for training.
Begins Missionary Work
Archdeacon Russell
found the scene of his new work far from attractive. Little did he dream that
more than fifty years of labor at this place were ahead of him. Nor could he
visualize the remarkable change, the far-reaching influence, the magnitude of
accomplishment that would result. With but a score of communicants, no church
building, race prejudice intense, public opinion indifferent, Negroes poor and
ignorant, and no school in the immediate community, he set to work. For eleven
months he conducted his services in the St. Andrews Church, (the white
Episcopal Church). In May he attended for the first time the Diocesan Council
of Virginia and there he appealed for a house of worship. At the close of the
session $300 was placed in his hands for a church building and also funds with
which to purchase a horse and saddle to take him over his missionary circuit.
This horse became a familiar figure in Southside Virginia and was
affectionately referred to as "Ida, the Missionary Horse."
School
Is Started
On the first day of
January, 1883 the Archdeacon and his young wife opened a parish school in the
vestry room of the little mission church. Soon these quarters became too small
and larger accommodations were urgently needed. Inspired by the conviction that
the people were eager for education he set himself to the task of finding means
to enlarge the school.
Through the generosity
of the late Rev. Mr. Saul of Philadelphia, a two-story frame building was
erected. This was the "Genesis" of St. Paul, for in this building the
Normal School was started, September 24, 1888. In less than two years the
school had outgrown these quarters and again he was faced with a problem that
was to confront him over and over again throughout the years: adequate
buildings and equipment to meet the need of the constantly increasing student
body.
But step by step, acre
by acre, building by building, department by department the school developed.
If asked how he had accomplished so much with so little the Archdeacon
invariably replied, "St. Paul's Normal and Industrial School was founded
on faith in God." And those who have followed this work have repeatedly
seen evidences of this "faith that moved mountains." Not only the mountains
of material need in some critical crises, but the mountains of race prejudice,
hostile public opinion, skeptical criticism and incredulous ignorance gradually
receded before the indefatigable courage of this remarkable character.
In the Councils of the
Church
The Archdeacon's interest in the
Episcopal Church went hand in hand with his interest in the school. When
ordained to the diaconate in 1882, there was only one colored Episcopal
congregation in the state of Virginia. Today in Southside Virginia there are
numerous churches and organized missions with thousands of communicants. Most
of these were founded and fathered by him until they could call their own
rector. In 1893 he was named Archdeacon of the Diocese of Southern Virginia to
give impetus to the colored work. He was the first Negro to be appointed to any
department of the Board of Missions of the National Council and served eight
years (1923-1931) as an additional member of the Department of Christian Social
Service of the National Council. He attended eleven consecutive triennial
sessions of the General Assembly. In 1917 the highest honor his church could
bestow was accorded him, namely he was elected Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese
of Arkansas. Eleven months later he was asked to accept the Suffragan Bishopric
of the Diocese of North Carolina. In declining the bishopric he wrote Bishop
Winchester as follows:
June 20,
1917.
My dear Bishop Whittle: . . . I have from the
time I received Archdeacon Johnson's Telegram informing me of my election as
Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese of Arkansas, given this whole matter my most
prayerful and serious consideration. Hence, I assure you that I have not
hastily arxived at my decision.
I have labored in one field during my whole
ministry of thirty-five years and three months. Twenty-one years of my ministry
have been spent in building up the St. Paul Normal and Industrial School. This
institution was founded on faith in God and the generosity of its friends; for
at the time the task was undertaken there was not a foot of ground or a penny
in sight for its support, yet through the providence of God the work has gone
forward steadily each day from its founding, July 2, 1888, until now it is the
largest institution of the Protestant Episcopal Church for the moral, spiritual,
intellectual and industrial training of colored boys and girls. . . . From its
very insignificant beginning, the school owns 1,600 acres of valuable land,
over forty buildings, large and small. . . . This, of course, puts the school
well beyond the experimental stage. . . .
Aside from the property value of the
institution there have come to us for the training of the head, hand and the
heart pretty close to 5,000 boys and girls, and nearly one-firth of these have
completed their education in books and some useful trades and are now devoting
their lives to the uplift or their less fortunate brethren. These are the
school's living epistles, ministers and messengers, known and read by those
with whom they come in contact. Among this great army of workers are twenty of
the successful clergymen of our Church. . . .
Now, my dear Bishop, I have cited the above
simply to give you some further idea of the many ties which bind me so closely
to the work which has claimed the best and largest number of the years of my
life. . . . Apart from the education work to which I have referred, I should
mention the further fact that I have had the pleasure of seeing the Church work
among my people grow from one congregation and less than 200 communicants to 37
churches and more than 2,000 communicants. . . . These ties are very close and
my heart is bound up with them and my friends or both races, whom I know and
love very dearly. . . . I am sorry finally that I cannot see my way clear to
accept this gracious call from your Diocese to serve my people in the great
Southwest.
Again
thanking you and your Council from the depths of my heart for the honor that
you and they have conferred upon me, believe me, my dear Bishop, your humble
and most grateful servant.
Characteristics and
Educational Ideals
Archdeacon Russell was
a Christ-like man. One could not be in his presence without sensing a radiance
that came from a close communication with God, a spiritual fortitude that
tansmuted itself into all he did. His resolute endurance, impregnable
determination and placid judgment seemed endowed with some hidden force and
demanded not only respect but reverence. The Archdeacon was deeply influenced
by the type of training he received as a student at Hampton. The deplorable condition of the men and
women of his parish, entirely dependent upon farming as a means of livelihood
made him realize the importance of training of the hands as well as he head.
But this did not go far enough. Devoutly religious himself, he felt that it was
useless to educate the head and train the hand if the heart was neglected. And
thus, his three-fold purpose was instilled into the building of the St. Paul’s
Normal and Industrial School.
Tributes of Esteem and
Honors Bestowed
Saying little Russell could not but
win admiration and esteem. And so it was that he was sought in his beloved
Virginia town and honors bestowed upon him. He was a member of Phi Gamma Mu,
National Honorary Social Service Society; was created Knight Commander of the
Humane Order of African Redemption by the President of Liberia and was given
the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity by the Virginia Theological Seminary,
at Alexandria the only Negro to be so honored. He was a member of the National
Council's Department of Christian Social Service and the first Negro to be a
member of the Council's departments. In 1929 he was given the Harmon Award for
meritorious service to his people. Twice elected to this episcopate, he
declined both offers in order to remain with the school which he had founded.
He resigned the principalship of the school in 1929 and was succeeded by his
son, The Rev. J. Alvin Russell. The Honorable Edward P. Buford, former
Commonwealth's Attorney, and a member of the House of Delegates, on the
occasion of the presentation of the Harmon Award said:
Perhaps
I may have a longer recollection than most of you here present. My recollection
goes back to the time when Archdeacon Russell came to this town. I can remember
when all these hills were covered with woods. . . . For over twenty-five years
I was prosecuting attorney for this county and during all of that time I never
had any charge to come up against a student or the management of St. Paul's. My
successor can bear witness to the same testimony. No one in this community can
fail to recognize the splendid character of the school's work and its great
value. Archdeacon Russell has been a benefactor, not only to his own race, but
to the whole community as well. His life has been one of strenuous endeavor and
high achievement and when his shadow lengthens toward the west, he is entitled
to the consolation which it would bring and the love and respect of both races
among whom he has labored the major part of this life.
In closing the Founder's Day Exercises, March 9,
1931 Bishop Thomson said: Archdeacon Russell, I convey to you on this Founder's
Day this tribute or affection and admiration. I say to you, students and
faculty, the best tribute you can pay Dr. Russell is to hold high and steadfast
the standards of St. Paul's -- the things for which it has always stood;
faithful work well done, a clean body, straight thinking, and a head always
bowed to God. In this community or county and throughout the state and nation,
he has given his people wonderful inspiration, not only to his race but to
those of the opposite group. The best tribute that can be paid Dr. Russell is
to see this work shall not fail, but grow and strengthen, and that it shall not
only outlive its founder, but shall outlive those who are now called upon to
carry it on, giving to the whole country an immortal girt endowed by James S.
Russell.
Editor’s
Note: James Russell Solomon was named a Local Saint during the 1996 Winter
Session of the 104th Annual Council of the Episcopal Church of the
Diocese of Southern Virginia.
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