Elliott was born in
Scott County, Virginia, on May 16, 1820, to John and Jane Elliott. The family moved to Kentucky during his childhood, with his father serving two terms in the Kentucky General Assembly. In 1841, he began practicing law in Prestonsburg, Kentucky. He was elected to the
Kentucky House of Representatives in 1847, representing Floyd, Pike, and Johnson Counties. He later followed it with a stint in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1853 to 1859. In 1861 he went back to the Kentucky legislature, but was expelled by Judge
Bland Ballard on December 21, 1861, for giving aid to the
Confederate States of America. He then turned his loyalties to the Confederacy, helping to form the
Confederate government of Kentucky, and served in its Senate as a Senator from Kentucky. After the war, he moved to
Bath County, Kentucky. In 1876, Elliott began serving on the Kentucky Court of Appeals.
Murdered by a fellow judge On March 26, 1879, Judge Elliott and fellow jurist
Thomas Hines left the Kentucky State House, when they met a judge from
Henry County, Kentucky, Colonel
Thomas Buford. Buford's late sister had lost her land to pay back a debt of $20,000; Elliott had ruled against her in a court proceeding in which she had attempted to save the property. After Hines had turned and walked away from Elliott, Buford asked Elliott whether he wanted to go on a
snipe hunt, then shot him point-blank with a double-barreled 12 gauge
shotgun loaded with
buckshot, as he had sworn on his sister's grave he would do. Hines inspected the body as Buford turned himself in to a deputy sheriff who had come to see where the shotgun blast came from. The assassination made news throughout the country.
The New York Times opined that the murder "could scarcely have taken place in any region calling itself
civilized except Kentucky, or some other
Southern state".
Aftermath Buford offered a defense of
not guilty by reason of insanity during his trial. The jury did indeed find him insane, after an initial 6–6 deadlock. Buford was sent to the Central Kentucky Insane Asylum in
Anchorage, Kentucky, but would eventually escape in 1882 to
Indiana, where he was unable to be extradited from. He voluntarily returned to the asylum in 1884 and died on February 12, 1885. Elliott was buried at
Frankfort Cemetery in
Frankfort, Kentucky. His wife had a statue erected in his honor at the courthouse of
Boyd County, Kentucky in
Catlettsburg, Kentucky. It is debated whether
Elliott County, Kentucky is named for Elliott or his father. ==See also==