Robert Ellin

Robert Ellin (1837–1904) was an English-born American stone and wood sculptor.

Ellin was born December 21, 1837, in Yorkshire, England. He was active in the United States 1867 to 1904. Not much is known about his life until his association with a fellow Englishman and Yorkshireman John William Kitson. Together they entered a mahogany breakfront in the 1876 Bi-Centential juried event in which they won a prize and much acclaim.

Robert Ellin established his firm as Robert Ellin & Co circa 1870 in NYC. He and John William Kitson joined forces in 1874 before the 1876 Bi-Centennial as Robert Ellin and Company. In 1879 they formally changed the firm's name to Ellin & Kitson. Following the early death of William Kitson in February 1888, the name of the firm was changed to Ellin, Kitson and Company. The Estate of John William Kitson became a silent partner until the estate sale of the business in 1904.

Ellin is mentioned in ''A History of the Metropolitan Museum of Art" 1913 by Howe and Kent.

Robert Ellin was an astute businessman and promoter of his firm. In order to control costs he became involved in many mining and other supplies businesses. In 1872 Robert Ellin was elected a director of the Bay of Fundy Red Granite Company located in St. George, New Brunswick, Canada; Perth Amboy Terra Cotta Works; 1893 The Goodsell Marble Company Newark NJ. He was active in establishing the Metropolitan Museum of Art and was an officer of the Sculpture Society covering stone.

In July 1874 he filed for a trade mark name of Terra-Cotta in the Great Britain Patent Office In 1899 Ellin filed for a U S patent of a design for crushing or grinding mill, which was awarded to him in May 1900 Patent # 650, 798. He is also noted to have carved the cherry frieze in Old South Church in Boston, Massachusetts between 1872 and 1875. Much of the finest work done by Ellin & Kitson has been in the magnificent group of private residences which have been the nucleus of our American art life ...sculpturing formalizing their partnership with emphasis in churches. They have been noted as specialty contractors in many buildings from NYC to Boston. Please see Ellin & Kitson for a list of some of the buildings with which they are associated.

In 1900 census he is noted to be living in Westchester, New York. He died February 3, 1904, in Yonkers, NY. At the time of his death, Ellin, Kitson & Co were working on Senator Clark of Montana's NYC home.

Ellin & Kitson worked with many notable architects and designers of the day: Thomas Wisedell, J C Cady, Robert J Withers, Vaux/ Withers, George B. Post, Kimball & Wisedell, Frederick Law Olmsted, and Richard Hunt among them.