Ian,
The four courses he did - The East, Yarra Yarra, Paraparaumu and Lake Karrinyup are all really good.
The best holes on the East are on the main paddock and with six of those seven holes being on the Composite Course. The holes over the road are still excellent and the long second shot up to the par five 10th green is one of the best in Australia.
Yarra Yarra was fantastic. Sadly some of the best Russell greens - 4 and 8 - were changed and boundary problems have forced alteration to 3 and 12 and neither are close to being as good as the holes he left.
Paraparaumu's 17th is a brilliant split fairway hole and he did 3 great short holes, none of which have a bunker in play. 16 and 5 have none and 2 has a couple half way to the hole in a ridge that are not in play. It is really fun to play and,like Yarra Yarra, it isn't long but there is a lot of thoughtful golf.
Karrinyup had no Morcom construction influence and consequently it was not in the class of the Melbourne courses.
We rebuilt all the greens and bunkers a few years ago and it seems quite a bit better now.
Here is something about what was a pretty diverse and interesting life. It was written by Bill Whitton - his father won 5 Australian Opens and he and Russell were hugely influential figures in Australian golf.
'Alex Russell (1892-1961), grazier, soldier, golfer and golf course architect, was born on 4 June 1892 at Geelong, Victoria, son of Philip Russell, grazier, and his wife Mary Gray, née Guthrie, both of whom were born at Geelong. The family owned Mawallok, a sheep-station near Beaufort. Alex was sent to Glenalmond College, Perthshire, Scotland, for his early schooling. Returning to Australia, he attended (1908-11) Geelong Church of England Grammar School where he became a prefect, captain of cricket, and a member of the football and shooting teams; he also gained prizes for mathematics, English and divinity. In 1912 he travelled to England and entered Jesus College, Cambridge, to study engineering.
On 9 October 1914 Russell was commissioned in the Royal Garrison Artillery. While serving on the Western Front, he was wounded twice, awarded the Military Cross and promoted (1918) acting major. At Holy Trinity Church, Chelsea, London, on 14 September 1917 he had married Jess Lucy, daughter of F. W. Fairbairn. The young couple sailed to Australia and settled at Sandringham, close to the Royal Melbourne Golf Club. Alex won the Australian Open in 1924, the Australian foursomes in 1924 and 1926, and the Victorian and South Australian championships in 1925. Jess won the national ladies' foursomes in 1926 and 1927, and came second in the ladies' amateur championship in 1927, 1930 and 1932.
In 1926 Russell assisted the Scottish architect Alister Mackenzie to design Royal Melbourne's new west course at Black Rock; he and Mick Morcom, the club's greenkeeper, supervised construction and the links were opened in 1931. The new east course, which Russell designed (1930) and helped to build, opened in 1932. He also designed courses at Lake Karrinyup, Perth (1928), Yarra Yarra, Melbourne (1929), and Paraparaumu Beach, near Wellington, New Zealand (1951).
For a short period in the mid-1920s Russell had been private secretary to Prime Minister S. M. (Viscount) Bruce. In 1932 Alex and Jess moved to Mawallok. He developed the station's merino stud, won prizes for his sheep, and presided (1950-51) over the Australian Sheepbreeders' Association. During World War II he worked for the Australian Red Cross Society as deputy-commissioner (1941-42) in the Middle East and chief commissioner (1943-46) of the field force which operated mainly in the South-West Pacific Area. In the eighteen months between these two appointments he served in the Militia as camp commandant at headquarters, I Corps, joined the Australian Imperial Force on 4 August 1943 and directed amenities organizations at headquarters, New Guinea Force, Port Moresby, and Land Headquarters, Melbourne. In October he was transferred to the Reserve of Officers with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was mentioned in dispatches.
Russell was appointed a knight of grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem in 1948. He was president (1936) of the Old Geelong Grammarians, a committee-member (1944-48) of the Melbourne Club, a councillor (1929-55) and life member (1933) of the Royal Melbourne Golf Club, and captain (1946-49) and president (1950-52) of the Barwon Heads Golf Club. In retirement he lived at South Yarra. Survived by his wife, and their son and two daughters, he died of hypertensive cerebrovascular disease on 22 November 1961 at Heidelberg and was cremated with Presbyterian forms. His estate was sworn for probate at £223,068. Greg Nuttman's charcoal sketch of Russell is held by the R.M.G.C.'