John Murton was born in 1585. He was a
furrier by trade in
Gainsborough. He joined the Gainsborough
Puritans in the Gainsborough congregation in the early 17th century. The church was exiled to
Amsterdam,
Holland, where it was renamed as the Baker Street congregation. Years later the church returned to England, in London. Murton had been a close disciple of the cleric
John Smyth after the exile in
Holland, and later returned to England with
Thomas Helwys, the Puritan leader, and the other exiled Puritans. The church was reestablished in White's Alley,
Spitalfields. Murton spent time in gaol with Helwys before his death, and then became minister of the White's Alley church. Murton ministered the church until 1624, after he discussed with some members. John Murton wrote several works influencing the Baptists in England and America, such as
Roger Williams who opened his influential book,
The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution by reprinting parts of John Murton's published tract ''A Most Humble Supplication of the King's Majesty's Loyal Subjects'' (1620). ==References==