Eleazor H. Ellis

Eleazor Holmes Ellis (August 26, 1826  1906) was an American lawyer and judge. He was the 6th Mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin, and was a Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge for seven years.

The Honorable

Eleazor H. Ellis
Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge for the 10th Circuit
In office
January 1, 1872  January 1879
Preceded byEzra T. Sprague
Succeeded byGeorge H. Meyers
6th Mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin
In office
April 1860  April 1861
Preceded byNathan Goodell
Succeeded byHenry S. Baird
Personal details
Born
Eleazor Holmes Ellis

(1826-08-26)August 26, 1826
Preble, Wisconsin Territory
Died1906 (aged 7980)
Brown County, Wisconsin
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Spouse(s)
  • Harriet Sovina Gilbert
  • (m. 1850; died 1854)
  • Eliza D. Chappel
  • (m. 1858; died 1878)
  • Ruth K. Gillette
  • (m. 1881)
Children
  • with Harriet Gilbert
  • Albert Gallatin Ellis
  • (b. 1851; died 1888)
  • Gilbert Ellis
  • (b. 1852; died 1860)
  • with Eliza Chappel
  • Virginia Ellis
  • (b. 1859; died 1865)
  • Ruth Ellis
  • (b. 1861; died 1905)
  • Frank Holmes Ellis
  • (b. 1863; died 1884)
  • Grace Ellis
  • (b. 1865; died 1886)
  • Frederick Wolcott Ellis
  • (b. 1867; died 1867)
  • Jenny May Ellis
  • (b. 1871)
  • James Wolcott Ellis
  • (b. 1874; died 1952)
MotherPamela (Holmes) Ellis
FatherAlbert Gallatin Ellis
RelativesFrederick S. Ellis (brother)

Family

Eleazor Holmes Ellis was born on his father's farm in the town of Preble, in Brown County, Wisconsin Territory. Eleazor and his siblings were some of the earliest colonist children born in the territory of Wisconsin.[1] His father, Albert Gallatin Ellis, was the publisher of the Green Bay Intelligencerthe first newspaper published west of Lake Michigan. Albert G. Ellis was also Mayor of Stevens Point, Wisconsin, at the same time that Eleazor was Mayor of Green Bay.

Eleazor's younger brother, Frederick S. Ellis, was also active in politics, serving in the Wisconsin State Assembly and Senate, and also later serving as Mayor of Green Bay.

Eleazor married three times and had a total of nine children. In 1850, Ellis married Harriet Sovina Gilbert. They had two children before she died in 1854. Ellis then married Eliza D. Chappel in 1858. They had seven children before her death in 1878. In 1881, he married Ruth K. Gillette.[1]

Ellis died from old age in 1906 and was interred at Green Bay's Woodlawn Cemetery.[1]

Career

Baird Law Office at Heritage Hill

Ellis studied law under Henry S. Baird, who had been Attorney General of the Wisconsin Territory. He was admitted to practice law in the Wisconsin Territory at age 21, in 1847, and opened an office in Manitowoc. In 1851, he returned to Green Bay. Over the next twenty years he was a successful lawyer in the city forming a series of partnershipswith William H. Norris, George G. Greene, S. D. Hastings, Sr., W. J. Green, and H. J. Fenbee.[1]

Ellis was elected Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge in 1871 and served seven years, resigning in 1879 due to poor health and low wages. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 1866 and 1891. Ellis served as Mayor of Green Bay in 1860. Later, he was Postmaster of Green Bay from 1896 to 1900 and Register of Deeds of Brown County, Wisconsin.[2]

Electoral history

Wisconsin Supreme Court Election, 1891[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
General Election, April 7, 1891
Nonpartisan Silas U. Pinney 96,661 54.90%
Nonpartisan Eleazor H. Ellis 77,312 43.91%
Scattering 2,082 1.18%
Total votes '176,055' '100.0%'

References

  1. "E. H. Ellis (1826 - 1906)". City of Green Bay. Archived from the original on August 29, 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2020 via Wayback Machine.
  2. Reed, Parker McCobb (1882). The Bench and Bar of Wisconsin. Milwaukee: P. M. Reed. pp. 374–375. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  3. Cunningham, Thomas J., ed. (1893). "Part III. Election statistics". The Blue Book of the state of Wisconsin (Report). State of Wisconsin. p. 308. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
Political offices
Preceded by
Nathan Goodell
Mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin
1860  1861
Succeeded by
Henry S. Baird
Legal offices
Preceded by
Ezra T. Sprague
Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge for the 10th Circuit
1872  1879
Succeeded by
George H. Meyers
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