Thomas Scott was born in 1747 at
Bratoft in
Lincolnshire, the son of a grazier (cattle farmer), the 11th of 13 children. His mother was better educated than his father and taught Thomas to read. He went to various small local private schools before being sent at the age of ten to a school in
Scorton in
Richmondshire, 150 miles away from home. Returning in 1762, he was apprenticed at 15 to a surgeon in nearby
Alford, but was soon dismissed for bad conduct. He returned to the family farm in disgrace and he was reduced to working as a labourer for his father, enduring this for ten years before finally leaving home in 1772 to become ordained as an Anglican priest at the age of 25. As he afterwards admitted, he went into the ministry for a comfortable career, and did not believe in most of the doctrine he was required to preach. He was admitted to
Clare College, Cambridge in 1773, as a
ten-year man. Scott was first a curate in
Buckinghamshire in 1772, and was appointed to the adjacent parishes of
Stoke Goldington and
Weston Underwood. In December 1774 he married Jane Kell, housekeeper to a local family. From 1775 to 1777 Scott served as curate of nearby
Ravenstone, through an exchange with the curate there. During that period, Scott began a friendship and correspondence with the hymn writer
John Newton, who was curate of neighbouring
Olney. This instigated an examination of his conscience and study of the Holy Scriptures that would convert him into an evangelical Christian, as related in his spiritual autobiography
The Force of Truth published in 1779. In 1781, Scott transferred to the curacy of Olney, Newton having gone to London, and in 1785 Scott also moved to London to take up a post as a hospital chaplain at the
Lock Hospital for syphilis sufferers. He would walk 14 miles every Sunday, preaching and taking services at various churches, including
St. Mildred, Bread Street, and
St. Margaret, Lothbury, in addition to his work at the hospital chapel. While in London he started publishing the
Commentary On the Whole Bible that was to make his name. His wife died in 1790 and he remarried on 4 November that year to a non-conformist writer, Mary Egerton (died 1840). During his time in London, Scott was, with Newton, one of the founders of the
Church Missionary Society, and its first secretary (1799–1802). In 1803, Scott left the Lock Hospital to become Rector of
Aston Sandford in Buckinghamshire, where he remained until his death in 1821. He kept up his involvement with the Church Missionary Society, taking in trainee missionaries for instruction. ==Publications==