He was the eldest son of Thomas Scott, an Independent minister at
Hitchin and then
Norwich, the half-brother of
Daniel Scott, and was born about 1703 at Hitchin in
Hertfordshire;
Thomas Scott was his brother, and
Elizabeth Scott his sister. He acted as his father's assistant at the Old Meeting in Norwich from about 1725, but his religious views became
Arian, and he was dismissed in 1737 or 1738. Scott was then established by his Norwich friends in a Sunday lectureship at the French church,
St Mary the Less. At first he drew good audiences, including members of the
Church of England, but his lectures were discontinued by 1743. Scott studied medicine at Edinburgh, and graduated M.D. in 1744. For some years he practised in Norwich. John Reynolds, an admirer, left him an estate at
Felsted in
Essex; here he ended his days, dying on 23 December 1769. A monument to his memory was in the Old Meeting, Norwich.
The Gracious Warning, a monody on his death, by George Wright, was published in 1774. ==Works==