Actor
Centurion, 1898–1902
Born 15 June 1848 in Brunswick, Missouri
Died 28 April 1902 in Washington, District of Columbia
Proposed by James Herbert Morse and Joseph Jefferson
Elected 7 May 1898 at age forty-nine
Century Memorial
The early experiences of Sol Smith Russell were trying and checkered. His death at the age of fifty-four came when he was well advanced in the pursuit of the dramatic ideals to which he was always devoted, and when he had reason to look forward to their continued development with confidence in increasing success and distinction. As an actor, from the humblest beginnings he always had complete sympathy with his chosen work. He loved the old stage, with its fine traditions, and had an almost religious fervor in his determination to keep it pure and wholesome. He loved his kind; his interest in all classes was strong, penetrating, kindly; his intercourse with all conditions of men was wide, and his observation of them amounted to insight. There was no sting in his wit, any more than there was the least shade of coarseness or cruelty in his abounding fun. Though never very well known in New York, few actors, if any, had a larger or more affectionate following throughout the country. In private life he was a companion of peculiar charm, bright, modest winning, and, to those whose privilege it was really to know him, “eminently a lovable man.”
Edward Cary
1903 Century Association Yearbook