He also composed a hymn to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne": "Hail, sweetest, dearest tie, that binds"[4] and wrote a History of the mission to Orissa: the site of the temple of Juggernaut (1835).
Sutton contacted the Free Will Baptists Mission mentioning the great needs of Odisha and adjoining Telugu-speaking areas; accordingly, he received an invitation from the convention to visit America.
[9][10] Sutton and his wife visited England and the United States and spent two years between 1833 and 1835 sharing their mission fields.
During their visit to United States, he spoke at the seventh General conference of the Free Will Baptists in October 1833 before an audience of 3,000 people inspiring them to devote their life to the missionary service.
At this conference, Jeremiah Phillips and Eli Noyes came forward to offer their service to Odia-speaking people.
[9][10] On 22 September 1835, Amos Sutton, Jeremiah Phillips, Eli Noyes, Samuel S. Day, including their wives and several other missionaries sailed to India.
From Calcutta, they travelled by land and joined their respective mission stations – E. L. Abbot departed to Burma, while the Day family proceeded to the Telugu-speaking provinces and arrived at Vizagapatnam – Amos Sutton, Eli Noyes, and Jeremiah Phillips proceeded to the Odia-speaking provinces and arrived at Cuttack where the British Baptist Missionaries were already working – Jeremiah Phillips and Eli Noyes dedicated their missionary service to Santals.
Sutton also prepared a dictionary named Sadhu Bhasharthabhidhan, a vocabulary of current Sanskrit terms with Odia definitions which was also printed in Odisha mission press in 1844.
On his visit to England in 1833, he composed a farewell hymn to the tune of Auld Lang Syne – "Hail sweetest, dearest tie, that binds".