Gideon Eliot

Gideon Eliot (1664-1713) of North Sintoun in Roxburghshire was an Edinburgh surgeon who served as Deacon (President) of the Incorporation of Surgeons of Edinburgh on two occasions.

Apprenticeship

Gideon Eliot, son of Thomas Eliot of Beirlie, was apprenticed to the surgeon George Stirling on 19 October 1681.[1]

Military career

Eliot was the first surgeon to the 26th (Cameronian) Regiment of Foot which was raised in April 1689.[2] The regiment was raised to fight the Jacobite forces under Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee, who opposed King William's accession to the throne of Great Britain and Ireland. In their first action, in August 1689, the Cameronians defeated Dundee's Jacobites at the Battle of Dunkeld, an action which took the impetus out of the Jacobite rising in Scotland.[3] As surgeon to the Cameronians Eliot would have attended the casualties at Dunkeld. He served with the Cameronians until 1692.

Surgical career

Eliot was elected Freeman (Fellow) of the Incorporation of Surgeons of Edinburgh on 26 December 1689.[4] He trained at least 2 surgical apprentices, Andrew Scot, apprenticed to him on 13 April 1692, [5] and Wiiliam Erskine of Seafield apprenticed 24 May 1699.[6] He was elected Deacon from 1693-1695, but when elected for a further time in 1697 he refused to accept the office.[7] The Town Council minutes record: ‘The Council considering that Gideon Eliot chyrurgeon being chosen deacon of that Incorporation to serve for the year to come, And for severall reasons and causes moveing him hes refused to accept of his office, doe therefore decerne the said Gideon Eliot in ane unlaw of the sume of 300 merks and to be imprisoned or his goods poynded till he pay the samen and produce his burges ticket to the Council’.[8] The threat of withdrawal of the Burgess ticket was a powerful deterrent, since it would deprive the individual of his livelihood. Thomas Dunlop was elected in his stead. Despite his refusal on this occasion, Eliot was elected Deacon again from 1699 to 1701.[9]

In 1696 Eliot invested £500 sterling in The Company of Scotland Trading to Africa and the Indies, also called the Scottish Darien Company.[10] Around one fifth of the total capital in Scotland was invested in the Company and its ill-fated Darien scheme resulted in the loss of all capital invested. Eliot was embroiled in further controversy in January 1699 when he was accused of harassment by Margaret Gibson, widow of the barber-surgeon James Keir.[11] She alleged that he had unfairly brought about the dismissal of two barber apprentices working in her shop. The case dragged on for over two years until Eliot was summoned to appear before the "Lords of counsell" on 5 November 1701, but no action appears to have been taken against him.[12]

Civic offices

Eliot was appointed to the Treasurer's Committee of the Town Council in 1694.[13] The following year he was appointed as a visitor to the College Physic Garden, together with his fellow surgeon Alexander Monteath and the physicians Sir Robert Sibbald and Sir Thomas Burnet.[14] In 1701, the Council awarded him £949-6s Scots ‘for performing of cures and furnishing of droges and medicaments be him to the souldiers of the Town's guard at the late rable and dreadfull fyre and other occasions’.[15]

Consultation for the Earl of Home

In 1695, Eliot was consulted regarding the health of the Earl of Home who had been placed under arrest at his home The Hirsel in Berwickshire. He and Sir Thomas Burnet, a physician, were asked by thye Council of King William to report whether the Earl's health was compatible with his removal to Edinburgh Castle, the Earl being deemed a dangerous person. For this journey to the Hirsel, Eliot was paid 100 merks while the physician who accompanied him was paid 200 merks - about ten pounds sterling. [16]


References

  1. Boog Watson CB.(ed) Register of Edinburgh Apprentices 1666-1700. Edinburgh, Scottish Record Office, 1929. p30 http://www.electricscotland.com/history/records/scottishrecordso47scotuoft.pdf
  2. Carter, Thomas (1867). Historical Record of the Twenty-Sixth, or Cameronian Regiment. London: W.O. Mitchell. p2
  3. Carter, Thomas (1867). Historical Record of the Twenty-Sixth, or Cameronian Regiment. London: W.O. Mitchell. p5
  4. Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. (1874). List of Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons o Edinburgh from ... 1581 to ... 1873. Edinburgh
  5. Boog Watson CB.(ed) Register of Edinburgh Apprentices 1666-1700. Edinburgh, Scottish Record Office, 1929. p81 http://www.electricscotland.com/history/records/scottishrecordso47scotuoft.pdf
  6. Boog Watson CB.(ed) Register of Edinburgh Apprentices 1666-1700. Edinburgh, Scottish Record Office, 1929. p31 http://www.electricscotland.com/history/records/scottishrecordso47scotuoft.pdf
  7. Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. (1874). List of Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons o Edinburgh from ... 1581 to ... 1873. Edinburgh
  8. Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh. 22 September 1697. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015068454936;view=1up;seq=264
  9. Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. (1874). List of Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons o Edinburgh from ... 1581 to ... 1873. Edinburgh
  10. A Perfect List of the Several Persons Residenters in Scotland, Who Have Subscribed as Adventurers in the Joynt-stock of the Company of Scotland Trading to Africa and the Indies ...Edinburgh. Andrew Anderson, 1696
  11. Minutes of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh 17 January 1699 RCSEd 1/3/1/8
  12. Minutes of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh 12 August 1701. RCSEd 1/3/1/11
  13. Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh. 10 October 1694. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015068454936;view=1up;seq=203
  14. Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh. 1 February 1695. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015068454936;view=1up;seq=212
  15. Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh. 16 July 1701. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015068454936;view=1up;seq=328
  16. Chambers, Robert. Domestic Annals of Scotland from the Reformation to the Revolution Edinburgh, W. & R. Chambers. vol 3 p 117 https://archive.org/stream/domesticannalsof03chamiala#page/116/mode/2up/search/Hirsel
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