Walter was born to John and Mary Innes Scott in 1796 in the town of Moffatt,
Scotland. His parents, who were members of the
Church of Scotland, hoped that he would become a
Presbyterian minister. He spent six years at the
University of Edinburgh, leaving in 1818. The same year he went to
New York City at the invitation of his maternal uncle, where he taught languages at a school on
Long Island. He soon moved to
Pittsburgh, where he was
baptized by immersion and became an active member of a small congregation led by a fellow Scotsman named George Forrester. Forrester helped shape Walter's understanding of
Christianity, and in particular his belief that immersion was the only appropriate form of baptism. The congregation in Pittsburgh influenced by the movement led by
James and
Robert Haldane. The Haldanes, who hoped to restore
New Testament Christianity, rejected the authority of
creeds, observed the
Lord's Supper weekly, practiced
foot washing and by 1809 practiced
believer's baptism by immersion rather than
infant baptism. Forrester also introduced Scott to the writings of
John Glas and
Robert Sandeman. When Forrester died in 1820, Scott replaced him as minister and as director of a small school. Scott married Sarah Whitsette in 1823, and the family moved to Ohio in 1826 He began working with the Campbells in August of that year. He was hired to work as an
evangelist in 1827. Within three years he brought over 3,000 converts into the movement. At that time the Campbells were associated with the
Mahoning Baptist Association; as the number of converts grew, conflicts with other Baptists also grew. In 1839 Scott and the Campbells disassociated themselves from the Baptists. Scott continued to preach after 1829, but increasingly his focus shifted to writing. In 1852 the family moved to
Covington, Kentucky where he established a school for women. He died on April 23, 1861. ==Writings==