Thomas Scott (1808–1878)

[1] Supporting Charles Voysey, deprived of his living in 1871 and subsequently preaching at St. George's Hall, London, he set up a theistic church in 1870, and moved to Upper Norwood to be near it.

[4] When she separated from her husband in 1873, the Scotts found her a small house in Colby Road, Upper Norwood.

He also reprinted such works such as Jeremy Bentham's Church of England Catechism Examined and David Hume's Dialogues on Natural Religion.

[1] Among the writers who contributed to the series were Francis Newman, William Rathbone Greg, Robert Willis, Samuel Hinds, Charles Voysey, Moncure D. Conway, Richard Davies Hanson, Marcus Kalisch, John Muir, John Addington Symonds, Thomas Lumisden Strange, Edward Maitland, Edward Vansittart Neale, Charles Bray, George Gustavus Zerffi, and Robert Rodolph Suffield.

[1] Scott put his name on The English Life of Jesus, 1872, a work thought to have been written in part by George William Cox.