Thomas Renton Elliott | |||||||||
Honorific Suffix: | CBE, DSO | ||||||||
Birth Date: | 11 October 1877 | ||||||||
Birth Place: | Willington, County Durham, England | ||||||||
Death Place: | Broughton Place, Peeblesshire, Scotland | ||||||||
Known For: | Investigation of the chemical transmission of nerve action | ||||||||
Education: | Durham School Trinity College, Cambridge | ||||||||
Employer: | University College Hospital | ||||||||
Relatives: | John Eliot | ||||||||
Notable Students: | Harold Percival Himsworth
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Thomas Renton Elliott [1] (11 October 1877 – 4 March 1961) was a British physician and physiologist.[2] [3] [4]
Elliott was born in Willington, County Durham, as the eldest son to retailer Archibald William Elliott and his wife, Anne, daughter of Thomas Renton, of Otley, Yorkshire. He studied natural sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge, specialising in physiology. He carried out research within the Department of Physiology at Cambridge under J N Langley.[5]
Although older than most students he joined University College Hospital to study in 1906, and became a junior staff member - Assistant Physician- in 1910. He would become the first professor of medicine and director of the medical unit at Gower Street, London.
Elliott joined the Officers’ Training Corps and in September 1914, joined Sir John Rose Bradford, as medical consultant to the British Expeditionary Force in France. He rose to the rank of colonel and was twice mentioned in dispatches. At the end of the war he received the DSO and was made CBE in 1919. He was one of four editors of the two volumes on the medical services for the Official History of the Great War
Elliot married Martha McCosh in 1918. They lived in Cheyne Walk in Chelsea, London[6] and had three sons and two daughters. One son was judge Archie Elliott, Lord Elliott.
In 1935, Elliott and his wife commissioned the architectural practice of Rowand Anderson, Paul & Partners to build their house Broughton Place in the Scottish Borders. It was designed by Basil Spence, then a partner in the firm, who worked closely with Mrs Elliott to meet her requirements. Work began in 1936 and was completed in 1938.
Elliott retired as professor of medicine 1939. He served on the Goodenough committee on medical education.
Elliott died at Broughton House in 1961.