Sir Edward John RussellOBEFRS[1] (31 October 1872 – 12 July 1965) was a British soil chemist, agriculture scientist, and director of Rothamsted Experimental Station from 1912 to 1943.[2][3] He was responsible for hiring R. A. Fisher for statistical research at Rothamsted and driven by concerns over a lack of international information exchange about agriculture, he initiated the Imperial Agricultural Bureaux, which later became the Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux.
Russell was president of the British Association for 1948–1949.[7] He married Elnor Oldham of Manchester in 1903 and they had six children of whom one son, Walter, became a soil physicist at Rothamsted.[2] He is buried, with his wife, in the churchyard of St Nicholas in Harpenden.
Books
Russell, E J (1921). Soil Conditions and Plant Growth. Monographs on Biochemistry. London: Longmans, Green – via Internet Archive.
Russell, E J (1912). Lessons on Soil. The Cambridge Nature Study Series. London: Cambridge University Press – via Internet Archive.
Russell, E J (1913). The Fertility of the Soil. The Cambridge Manuals of Science and Literature. London: Cambridge University Press – via Internet Archive.
Russell, E J (1921). A Student's Book on Soils and Manures. The Cambridge Farm Institute Series. London: Cambridge University Press – via Internet Archive.
Russell, E J, ed. (1923). The Micro-organisms of the Soil. The Rothamsted Monographs on Agricultural Science. London: Longmans, Green – via Internet Archive.