Russell Road (Ontario)

Russell Road is a road in Eastern Ontario, Canada.

Russell Road originally ran from Montreal Road in Ottawa along the east bank of the Rideau River and then bent east where Tremblay Road is now, and then south and east until the border of Clarence Township, Ontario (now the city of Clarence-Rockland) and the Township of Alfred and Plantagenet.

However, three major intersection modifications have cut the road into 4 parts, and another shortened the Road substantially, making Russell Road arguably the most altered Road in Ottawa's history. Currently the Road begins at Industrial Avenue on the outskirts of the Riverview neighbourhood and runs southeast before ending at Smyth Road. (the road originally past Industrial Avenue to the north then jogged west at about where Tremblay Road is now, then north again along where North River Road is today and ended at Montreal Road). The road begins again near the Elmvale Shopping Centre, from Saint Laurent Boulevard, and runs south until it turns into Hawthorne Road. To keep going on Russell, one must make a left turn.

This part of Russell Road continues to the community of Ramsayville, Ontario, where the road then ends at Ramsayville Road. To keep going on Russell Road, one must take a left on Ramsayville Road then a right. This jog was made to ensure that there was only one bridge under Highway 417. At this point Russell Road continues east through the communities of Carlsbad Springs, Ontario, Bearbrook, Ontario before leaving the city of Ottawa. It also passes through the communities of Cheney, Ontario and Bourget, Ontario in the City of Clarence-Rockland. The road was named because it was used by travellers, before the construction of Highway 417 as the route to get to Russell, Ontario from both Ottawa in the west and Bourget in the east. Russell Road for the majority of its length passes through rural surroundings. It is known Ottawa Road #26 from St. Laurent Boulevard until the City of Ottawa limits, and County Road #2 in Prescott and Russell County.

Roads in Ottawa
Provincial Highways
  • 7
  • 416
  • 417
Major Arteries
  • 4th Line
  • Tenth Line
  • Airport
  • Albion
  • Bank
  • Baseline
  • Blair
  • Bronson
  • Carling
  • Carp
  • Cedarview
  • Conroy
  • Donnelly
  • Dwyer Hill
  • Eagleson
  • Elgin
  • Fallowfield
  • Greenbank
  • Hazeldean
  • Heron
  • Hunt Club
  • Innes
  • King Edward
  • March
  • Merivale
  • Mitch Owens
  • Moodie
  • Montreal
  • Parkdale
  • Prince of Wales
  • Regional Road 174
  • Richmond
  • Rideau
  • River
  • Riverside
  • Robertson
  • St. Joseph
  • St. Laurent
  • Strandherd
  • Terry Fox
  • Vanier
  • Walkley
  • Wellington
  • Woodroffe
Collectors/Secondary Arteries
  • Albert
  • Alta Vista
  • Bankfield
  • Beechwood
  • Booth
  • Brookfield
  • Gladstone
  • Hawthorne
  • Hog's Back
  • Jockvale
  • Katimavik
  • Kent
  • Laurier
  • Lees
  • Leitrim
  • Main
  • Maitland
  • Meadowlands
  • Metcalfe
  • Nicholas
  • North Gower
  • O'Connor
  • Old Prescott
  • Osgoode Main
  • Pinecrest
  • Preston
  • Russell
  • Slater
  • Smyth
  • Somerset
  • Sparks
  • St. Patrick
  • Sussex
  • Tremblay
  • Trim
Federal arteries
  • Aviation
  • Colonel By
  • Island Park
  • Rockcliffe
  • Sir John A. Macdonald
  • Queen Elizabeth
Roads in Ontario

Famous quotes containing the words russell and/or road:

    There comes Poe, with his raven, like Barnaby Rudge,
    Three-fifths of him genius, and two-fifths sheer fudge.
    Who talks like a book of iambs and pentameters,
    In a way to make people of common sense damn metres,
    Who has written some things quite the best of their kind,
    But the heart somehow seems all squeezed out by the mind.
    —James Russell Lowell (1819–1891)

    Youth is rather to be pitied than envied by people in years since it is doomed to toil through the rugged road of life which the others have passed through, in search of happiness that is not to be met with in it and that, at the highest, can be compounded for only by the blessing of a contented mind.
    Samuel Richardson (1689–1761)