Eli Huston (sometimes spelled Houston; c. 1799 – June 12, 1835)[1][2] was a Mississippi lawyer who served as a justice of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in 1832.
Born in Kentucky to Joseph Huston, he was the older brother of Felix Huston.[3][4] Huston moved to Natchez, Mississippi, where he established a successful law practice. Huston was appointed to a seat on the state supreme court vacated by Justice John Black in 1832, "but was on the bench only a few months, owing to the changes of the revised constitution".[5][6]
Arkansas Governor Robert Crittenden, in an 1834 letter to his brother, described meeting Huston during a trip to Mississippi: "My reception there was most flattering, especially by Eli Huston who is one the first lawyers in the state — I had not known him before. He is an estimable man, and missconceived in character greatly".[7]
Huston died after an illness of several weeks. Following his death, the members of the Natchez Bar of Adams County held a meeting to memorialize Huston, and resolved to assist with the arrangements for his funeral.[1]