Background
The son of Edward Russell and Sarah Jane Kelly, he was born in Coley"s Point, Conception Bay, Newfoundland.
The son of Edward Russell and Sarah Jane Kelly, he was born in Coley"s Point, Conception Bay, Newfoundland.
Russell was educated there and at Bishop Feild College.
He started work as a teacher immediately after completing high school at the age of 16. After teaching in several small Newfoundland communities during the 1920s and 1930s, interspersed with stints at Memorial University College, he became a magistrate. In 1943 he became head of the government division responsible for promoting co-operatives throughout Newfoundland.
After 1949, when Newfoundland joined Canada, Russell entered politics and served for two years in Joey Smallwood"s cabinet as Minister of Natural Resources, but, opposing Smallwood"s industrial policies, resigned from cabinet and left politics shortly thereafter.
Foreign several years he worked as an insurance salesman, later returning to teaching at the high school and then at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Despite having done little previous creative writing, from 1954 to 1961, Russell wrote and narrated (on Canadian Broadcasting Company Radio) stories set in a fictional Newfoundland outport, Pigeon Inlet, using the persona of "Uncle Mose".
Many featured tall tales, but some were based on Russell"s own experiences in rural Newfoundland. In addition to providing entertainment, these stories commented on issues of the day and also provided practical information to a population just beginning to deal with a profound change in its system of government.
Two volumes of these stories were published in the 1970s, and three more in the 1980s.
Russell is also the author of several radio plays, the most successful of which was The Holdin" Ground. Two albums were released after his death. Both were made up of stories taken from his Canadian Broadcasting Company Radio programs.
The Chronicles Of Uncle Mose - 1979
Uncle Mose From Pigeon Inlet - 1981
In 2011, he was designated a "Person of Provincial Significance".
These stories featured a colourful cast of characters and were told from a generally positive and optimistic, yet realistic, point of view.