He was the 1st son of Richard Scott, son of
Sir John Scott (d. 1533) of
Scots Hall in
Smeeth, near
Ashford in
Kent. His mother was Mary Whetenall (d. 1582), daughter of George Whetenall of Hextall’s Place,
East Peckham. His father died before 1544, and his mother remarried Fulk Onslow, clerk of the parliament; dying on 8 October 1582, she was buried in the church of
Hatfield, Hertfordshire. Reginald or Reynold (as he signed his name in accordance with contemporary practice) was born about 1537. When about eighteen, Scot entered
Hart Hall, Oxford, but left the university without a degree. His writings show some knowledge of law, but he is not known to have joined any
inn of court. Marrying in 1568, he seems to have spent the rest of his life in his native county. His time was mainly passed as an active country gentleman, managing property which he inherited from his kinsfolk about Smeeth and
Brabourne, or directing the business affairs of his first cousin,
Sir Thomas Scott, who proved a generous patron, and in whose house of Scots Hall he often stayed. He was collector of subsidies for the
lathe (county subdivision) of Shepway in 1586 and 1587, and he was perhaps the Reginald Scot who acted in 1588 as a captain of untrained foot-soldiers at the county muster. He was returned to the parliament of 1589 as member for
New Romney, "but there is no evidence to support the suggestion" that he was a
justice of the peace (JP). He describes himself as "esquire" in the title-page of his
Discoverie, and is elsewhere designated "armiger". Scot married at Brabourne, on 11 October 1568, Jane Cobbe of Cobbes Place, in the parish of
Aldington. By her he had a daughter Elizabeth, who married Sackville Turnor of Tablehurt,
Sussex. Subsequently, Scot married a second wife, a widow named Alice Collyar, who had a daughter called Mary by her former husband. Scot made his own will (drawing it with his own hand) on 15 September 1599. He died at Smeeth on 9 October following, and was probably buried in the church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, with his first wife Jane. His small properties about Brabourne, Aldington, and
Romney Marsh he left to his widow. The last words of his will run: "Great is the trouble my poor wife hath had with me, and small is the comfort she hath received at my hands, whom if I had not matched withal I had not died worth one
groat." ==Doctrine and espoused belief==