BIO: C. B. ELLIOTT, M.D., Clearfield County, PA
 
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From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania,
and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr.,
Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, pages 358-360.
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  C. B. ELLIOTT, M. D., physician and surgeon, who has been located at 
Coalport, Clearfield county, Pa., since 1892, was born near Cumberland, Md., 
April 23, 1854, and is a son of John and Catherine (Miller) Elliott.
  John Elliott was born near Ligonier, Pa., a son of John Elliott, who came 
to America from Ireland, in 1792.  The history of the Elliotts, or, as 
originally written - Eliot or Ellis - dates back to the 11th century.  
William H. Eliot was a leader under, and principal adviser of William, Duke 
of Normandy during the Conquest, 1066.  It was a John Eliot who held the fort 
at Gibraltar, against Spain, at that time being a commander in the British 
Navy.  The family is traced to the north of Britain and the name Eliot 
perhaps was thus written when the family had estates near Eliot, Dundee, 
Scotland.  The old Eliot stronghold is at Port Eliot, St. Germans, Cornwall, 
England.  It was purchased by John Eliot, son of Edward Eliot, of Cutland, 
Devonshire.  The arms of the Eliot family are thus mentioned in heraldy:  
Argent; a fesse gules, between double coutises wavy azure; Crest:  and 
elephant's head, argent, plain collared gules; Supporters:  two eagles, 
reguardent wings displayed and inverted proper, each charged on the breast 
with an ermine spot sable.  The motto:  "Proedentibus insta" is freely 
translated as "Press close upon those who take the lead."
  Sir John Whitaker Ellis, or Eliot, descended from two chiefs:  Charles 
Ellis, of Abbots Bromley, and George Ellis, who was at the conquest of 
Jamaica in 1656.  The latter's grandson, Charles Rose Ellis, of Claremont, 
Surrey, was, on July 15, 1826, created Baron Seaford.  It was from this 
branch of the family came Charles Augustus Ellis, the sixth Baron Howard De 
Walden; while from the Abbot Bromley branch, one of its members, Sir John 
Whitaker Ellis, represented the City of London as Lord Mayor.  The crest of 
this family is thus described:  A female figure ppr. vested or, holding in 
the dexter hand a chaplet of roses gules, and in the senister a palm branch 
slipped vert (Middlesex).
  The progenitors of the American Ellis family can be traced to Wales.  
Richard Ellis was born in Dublin, Ireland, August 10, 1704.  His father, a 
native of Wales, died when Richard was about thirteen years of age and the 
next authenticated record is of his appearing at Plymouth, Mass.  His 
descendants are almost without exception people who have achieved importance 
in some way.  Included in these are:  O. W. Ellis, of Chicago, Ill.; Rev. 
Charles H. Ellis, of Kingston, N. Y.; Stewart H. Elliott, of New York City; 
C. B. Elliott, M. D., of Coalport, Pa.; W. Dixon Ellis, of New York City; 
Marshall Elliott, of Baltimore, Md., born at Wilmington, N. C., January 24, 
1846, a son of Aaron E. Elliott - Harvard, 1868, Ph.D., Princeton, 1877, 
LL.D., Wake Forest, N. C., 1891 Modern Languages, Associate of the American 
Philogical Society and the Maryland Historical Society; and John Whittaker 
Elliott, M. D., of Boston, Mass., born at Keene, N. H., in October, 1852, son 
of John Henry Elliott, a member of the Maryland University Alumni, the Johns 
Hopkins and the Rolland Park Country Club.
  John Elliott, father of Dr. Elliott, of Coalport, resided at different 
places during life, for many years being engaged in lumbering and having his 
home alternately or successively at Mt. Savage, Southampton, Tipton and 
Tyrone, in 1880 moving from the latter place to Coalport, where he opened the 
first store in the place, the old building where he conducted it still being 
in evidence.  He died here in 1890 at the age of seventy-four years.  He 
married Catherine Miller, who was born at Addison, Somerset county, Pa., and 
died in 1910, aged about eighty years.  They had three children:  C. B.; Jack 
M. and Laura B.  Jack M. Elliott was active in Republican politics and at one 
time was the nominee of his party for sheriff, and while the county had a 
large normal Democratic majority, he came within 200 votes of winning the 
election.  He resides at Coalport.  Laura B. Elliott became the wife of J. C. 
Weller, county superintendent of schools of Somerset county.  They reside at 
Gebhart.
  C. B. Elliott was educated at Tipton Academy, where he was a student for 
five years.  In 1871 he entered Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, 
where he was graduated in the class of 1874.  He located at Osceola Mills and 
practiced there for one year, when the place was practically destroyed by 
fire and he then settled at Altoona and four years later moved to 
Indianapolis, Ind., but one year later came back to Pennsylvania and was 
established for five years at Utahville, in Clearfield county.  He suffered a 
second loss by fire and in 1884 located again at Altoona, where he was in 
practice until 1892, when there appeared to be a particularly good 
professional opening at Coalport, and he has been in active practice here 
ever since.  He is one of the county physicians.  Dr. Elliott makes a 
specialty of diseases of the eye and in treating these delicate organs he has 
been more than usually successful.
  Dr. Elliott was married in 1880 to Miss Laura M. Cherry, a daughter of John 
W. Cherry, who formerly was an undertaker at Altoona.  Mrs. Elliott died in 
1891.  Dr. Elliott takes a great deal of pride in his ancestral history, 
although some of the later records are not complete, family annals having 
been lost with other important documents, in the fire that destroyed his 
effects while in practice at Altoona.