Russell, Ontario
The Township of Russell is a municipal township, located south-east of Canada's capital of Ottawa in eastern Ontario, in the United Counties of Prescott and Russell, on the Castor River.
The township had a population of 19,598 in the 2021 Canadian census.
Communities
The primary communities are Embrun and Russell. The township administrative offices are located in Embrun.Smaller communities listed in the official Ontario place names database are Felton, Forget, Marionville, North Russell and Pana. Both the municipal government and Canada Post consider Brisson and Forget to be part of Embrun, and Felton, North Russell, and Pana as part of Russell. Canada Post also considers Marionville to be part of Russell, although the municipality considers Marionville to be separate. As Marionville is on the border of the township, parts of it fall into the neighbouring jurisdictions of North Dundas Township and the City of Ottawa.
History
The Township of Russell and the Village of Russell were both named in relation to Peter Russell more than 200 years ago. Peter Russell was a slave owner and believed to be an active participant in delaying legislation that would put an end to slavery in this region. At the May 2, 2022, Council Meeting, the township council decided to remove Peter Russell as namesake, with the intention to honour all "Russells" who would have helped develop the township..At one time the township was named Elmsley, it was officially named Russell in 1797.
- 1791: The Parliament of Upper Canada divided the territory into four districts.
- 1792: The four districts were divided into 19 counties. The territory that is now known as the Township of Russell, was in Stormont County.
- January 1, 1800: the subdivision of Stormont County created the County of Russell, which included the Townships of Clarence, Cambridge, Cumberland, Gloucester, Osgoode and Russell.
- 1838: the Townships of Gloucester and Osgoode are annexed to the Carleton County.
- 1841: a municipal law inaugurated the councils of the districts composed of representatives from the townships.
- January 1, 1850: under the Municipal Corporation Act adopted in 1849, the districts councils were abolished and replaced by the township councils which became the only recognized administrative units. Thus townships and municipalities were born that they delegated representatives to the County Councils. When the number of male owners was less than 100, a township had to unite with another to send a representative to the County. This was the case of the four townships in Russell County before December 28, 1850. With the increase in population, each township eventually delegated its own representative. Thus we witness the creation of the municipalities of Cumberland in 1850, Clarence and Cambridge in 1854 and Russell on January 1, 1857.
- 2022: the town announces that, due to Peter Russell having been a practitioner of slavery, the town would no longer be named for him, and would instead be named for "all people named Russell who have had a positive impact".
The Great Fire in Russell
The New York Central Railway
The New York Central Railway was an essential part of Russell's development. In 1884, the Township's council knew that they needed transportation if they wanted the community to grow. There were a few train stations in the surrounding towns like South Indian, Osgood and Morewood, but to get there they needed to pay extra fare to take a stage. In June 1897, the council passed a by-law to raise $10,000 to aid the Ontario Pacific Railway Company to build the railway. In exchange, the railway company had to have at least two passenger trains that would stop for all the passengers each way at all the stations including Russell. The Ontario Pacific Railway Company changed its name to The Ottawa and New York Railway Company in 1898 then the line was leased to the New York Central Railway Company. With the building of the station, Russell Village became the commercial centre for the Township and also for the eastern part of Osgoode and the northern part of Winchester. The hotels were filled with travellers and settlers, new shops were opening and loads of farm animals passed through the stockyards. It became a livestock sales centre. Around 1940 the passenger traffic began diminishing, people had their own cars. In 1954 the passenger train service to Russell was abandoned. On February 14, 1957, the last train ran on the New York Central System.Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Russell had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.Languages
The township is predominantly English-speaking with a significant French-speaking minority. 61% of the population speaks English most often at home, while 36% speaks French most often at home. The remaining 3% speak either both languages equally, or speak a non-official language most often. The different parts of the township have different distributions of language, however. Embrun has a slight francophone majority, with 50% French-speaking and 46% English-speaking. Russell, on the other hand, has a stronger anglophone majority, with 86% English-speaking and 12% French-speaking.In terms of mother tongue, however, the statistics differ. Because it is more common for Francophone Canadians to switch to using English as their main language later in life, than it is for Anglophone Canadians to switch to French, the percentage of the population that has French as a mother tongue is higher than the percentage of the population that uses French as their main language at home. With the mother tongue statistic, the township is 52% anglophone and 43% francophone. In Embrun, 58% have French mother tongue and 38% have English mother tongue. In Russell, 75% have English mother tongue and 19% have French mother tongue.
The most commonly spoken minority languages in the township are Dutch, German, Spanish, and Italian. 280 people across the township have one of these four languages as their mother tongue.
| Language spoken most often at home | Entire township | Entire township | Embrun | Embrun | Russell | Russell |
| English | 10,050 | 61.2% | 2,735 | 43.4% | 3,815 | 85.5% |
| French | 5,830 | 35.5% | 3,405 | 54.0% | 520 | 11.7% |
| English and French equally | 325 | 2.0% | 110 | 1.7% | 70 | 1.6% |
| Other | 205 | 1.2% | 55 | 0.9% | 55 | 1.2% |
| Mother tongue language | Entire township | Entire township | Embrun | Embrun | Russell | Russell |
| English | 8,550 | 52.1% | 2,610 | 38.1% | 3,330 | 74.7% |
| French | 7,010 | 42.7% | 3,935 | 57.5% | 865 | 19.4% |
| English and French equally | 250 | 1.5% | 110 | 1.6% | 65 | 1.5% |
| Dutch | 105 | 0.6% | 15 | 0.2% | 45 | 1.0% |
| German | 95 | 0.6% | 5 | 0.1% | 25 | 0.6% |
| Spanish | 40 | 0.2% | 15 | 0.2% | 10 | 0.2% |
| Italian | 40 | 0.2% | 20 | 0.2% | 10 | 0.2% |
| Others | 320 | 2.0% | 135 | 2.0% | 110 | 2.5% |
Ethnocultural ancestries
The township's population is 93.1% white, 3.1% Aboriginal, 1.2% Black, 0.8% Arab, and 1.7% other visible minority.The main ethnic ancestries among the white population are French, English, Irish, Scottish, German, and Dutch.
In data:
Single responses: 27.2% of respondents gave a single response of Canadian, while a further 23.6% identified with both Canadian, and one or more other ancestries. 9.7% of respondents gave a single response of French, 3.5% gave a single response of English, 3.1% gave a single response of Dutch, and 2.5% gave a single response of Irish.
Multiple responses: Counting both single and multiple responses, the most commonly identified ethnocultural ancestries were:
| Canadian | 50.8% |
| French | 34.9% |
| English | 20.1% |
| Irish | 18.0% |
| Scottish | 13.7% |
| German | 7.6% |
| Dutch | 5.2% |
| North American Indian | 3.1% |
| Italian | 2.0% |
Percentages are calculated as a proportion of the total number of respondents and may total more than 100% due to dual responses.
All ethnocultural ancestries of more than 2% are listed in the table above according to the exact terminology used by Statistics Canada.