[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 143 (Thursday, November 20, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6167-S6168]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING HERMAN J. RUSSELL
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, on Saturday night of last week, Georgia,
Atlanta, and America lost a great citizen.
Herman J. Russell was one of the greatest African-American business
leaders and civil rights leaders the world has ever known. He passed
peacefully in his home after a short illness, but his legacy and his
life will last forever--not just in the history books but indelibly on
the skyline of our city.
In 1952 Herman J. Russell started a small plastering company called
H.J. Russell & Company. He had just graduated from Tuskegee Institute
in Alabama, and he came to Georgia to make his fortune and his fame. He
started out plastering walls and ceilings, and he finished his career
building the Georgia Dome and the Georgia Pacific Building, the 1996
Olympic Stadium, and buildings throughout the Atlanta skyline. While
doing so he made a lot of money which he reinvested back not into his
investments but into his community.
In 1999 Herman Russell by himself gave $4 million to Morehouse
College, Clark Atlanta University, and Georgia State University, and
last December gave $1 million to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta to
rebuild and help renovate the facility in downtown Atlanta for a
hospital for children.
He was always giving back more than he asked, but his greatest gift
may have been the fact that he enabled Martin Luther King in the civil
rights movement in the 1960s. It is well known that Dr. King would go
to Herman's house to take refuge, take a swim and relax between the
arduous times of the civil rights movement. Herman Russell would
finance the movement and finance the movement's efforts so they could
continue to move forward to bring about equality in the South. That is
an indelible mark he left in history, not just for our State but for
our country.
Herman and his wife had three wonderful children. They are involved
in
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the business today. Today the business is still flourishing, as it
always has. In fact, the new Atlanta Dome Stadium, which will house the
Falcons, is a $1.3 billion stadium in which the company was integrally
involved.
Our city has lost a great friend, a great African American, and a
great entrepreneur--so great, he was recognized by the Atlanta Chamber
as its first African-American member and its second African-American
president. He has been recognized by the Butler Street YMCA, the
Atlanta and Georgia Business Council, and almost every entrepreneur
group there is for his contributions to business and his contributions
to investments in the State of Georgia.
It is with great sad tomorrow night that I will go to Ebenezer
Baptist Church and be a part of the wake ceremony for Mr. Russell. But
it is with great pride that I rise today on the Senate floor to make
sure the Record indelibly recognizes the life, the times, and the
contributions of Herman J. Russell.
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