- In August 1992, Russell sold his supporting-actor Oscar, saying he needed the money to pay his wife's medical bills and other expenses. An anonymous buyer paid $60,500, including a 10 percent commission for the auctioneer.
- He became so adept with the hooks that replaced his hands, he would joke he could do anything with them except pick up a dinner check.
- As well as his Best Supporting Actor Oscar, he received an honorary Oscar for being an inspiration for disabled war veterans throughout the U.S., making him the first (and only) actor to receive two Oscars for the same role.
- Volunteered the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
- Director William Wyler told Russell after The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) wrapped, "There aren't that many parts for a guy with no hands. You should go back to college, get your degree." Russell followed the advice, got a business degree from Boston University and became an ardent advocate for the disabled.
- In 1964 he was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson as chairman of the President's Committee on Hiring the Handicapped.
- Annual award presented by the President's Committee on Employment of People with Disabilities is called the Harold Russell Medal.
- The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences tried to keep him from selling his award, and offered to loan him money, but he turned them down. (Several Oscars have since been auctioned off posthumously, but the Academy now makes all recipients sign an agreement forbidding them from selling their Oscars.)
- First wife Rita Russell was his childhood sweetheart.
- Served three terms as the National Commander of the AMVETS. As National Commander, he wrote an 11 April 1951 letter to President Harry S. Truman supporting his decision to relieve General Douglas MacArthur of his supreme command: "The issue is whether the ultimate civil authority of the United States can tolerate actions in contempt of constitutional lines of authority. Any lessening of civil power over military power must inevitably lead away from democracy."
- Had one of the least prolific careers of any Oscar winner, starring in only three films over a span of fifty years.
- Two children: Adele and Gerald (Rita's son from her first marriage).
- Interred at Lakeview Cemetery, Wayland, MA.
- At the 1947 Academy Awards, at the age of 33, he became the youngest person to win a Best Supporting Actor Oscar.
- Has four grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren.
- On June 6, 1944, while he was an Army instructor teaching demolition work with the U.S. 13th Airborne Division at Camp Mackall, North Carolina, a defective fuse detonated TNT explosives that he was handling. He lost both hands. Ironically that day was the same date as D-Day, the Allied invasion of France against occupying Nazi Germany.
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