John Newton @ 300 : Birth, Baptism, Genealogy

John Newton was born on 24th of July 1725, making 2025 his 300th Birthday.  

With the growing accessibility to digitised sources and online catalogues, the Cowper & Newton Museum and researcher Jim Kenny returned to see what else might be newly discovered about John Newton’s birth, baptism and family.  Exciting new discoveries from this research now add to the story and suggest some new interpretations.  These are shared in the summary article below and also in detail in the accompanying paper available from this link: John Newton 300: Birth, Baptism and Genealogy

In His Own Words

Some information about his birth and his parents was shared by Newton in his spiritual autobiography, ‘An Authentic Narrative …’,  published in 1764.  To this, a little more information was added in 1808, the year after his death, by Richard Cecil in his Memoirs of the Rev. John Newton,

Cowper & Newton Museum
Cowper & Newton Museum

Richard Cecil opens his Memoirs of the Rev. John Newton with a letter from Newton himself.

I was born in London the 24th of July, 1725, old style. My parents, though not wealthy, were respectable. My father was many years master of a ship in the Mediterranean trade. In the year 1748 he went Governor of York Fort in Hudson’s Bay, where he died in the Year 1750.

My mother was a dissenter, a pious woman, and a member of the late Dr Jennings’s church.

In the years that followed, researchers and historians added to his life story by piecing together more from other available sources, in particular the marriage record of his parents at the parish church of St Mary le Bow, Cheapside, baptism records for the Old Gravel Lane Meeting House and the will of Simon Scatliff. 

The National Archives, RG 4/4304, Gravel Lane, Old, St George's East, London, Denomination: Independent: Births and Baptisms (1704-1837).
Marriage record of John Newton Snr and Mary Scatliff by courtesy of the parish church of St Mary-le-Bow, Cheapside, London

Baptism: 1725, July 26, John of John and Elizabeth Newton in Wapping

Many Nonconformist registers were collected by the General Register Office in 1837 and 1857 and are now kept at The National Archives.

A note about John Newton’s life had been entered in the records by William Kelly, minister of Old Gravel Lane from 1835 to 1858:

This was the celebrated John Newton whose early history is so full of awful depravity – but who was at length arrested by the Almighty “this far shall though go but no further” – he was afterwards rector of Saint Mary Woolnoth in the City for many years – and died at a good old age ripe for glory – He was interned in the Vault under the Church of Saint Mary Woolnoth.
Wm Kelly.

It has been thought by biographers and historians that Newton was baptised at the Meeting House where his mother worshipped. However, a search of the full set of records shows that the Old Gravel Lane was actually the third Meeting House used by the Independent congregation in Wapping. The building on Old Gravel Lane Meeting House didn’t open until 1737 which was six years after Newton’s mother died, and 12 years after Newton was baptised.

Wider research through land tax records and contemporary maps of the area shows that there was only one Independent Meeting House in Wapping at the time of Newton’s birth. This was named Orchard Meeting and was situated two streets away from where the Newtons and the Meeting House’s minister David Jennings lived. In 1736, the trustees of Jennings’ Meeting House had been left a lease of land which enabled a new building to be erected that could hold 700 people. The new building also had a small burial ground. The congregation had previously been buried in the graveyards of the parish church.

Find out more about the detailed research behind the newly located Orchard Meeting House in the accompanying booklet.

John Newton Snr and Rev David Jennings on Red Lyon Street in 1730. Wapping: London, England, Land Tax Records 1692 - 1932. The London Archives
Section of ‘The Parish of St. John’s Wapping. The Parish of St. Paul Shadwell’ from John Strype’s edition of John Stow’s Survey of the cities of London and Westminster and borough of Southwark, 1720 edition, Vol. II, bk. 4, p.46. Public Domain. Annotations by Jim Kenny

The Scatliff and Newton Families

The wealth of family history documents now available meant that there was the opportunity to re-investigate the Newton and Scatliff family trees.

Newton’s mother, Elizabeth, is often described as the daughter of a mathematical instrument maker named Simon Scatliff. Nothing has previously been discovered about Newton’s paternal grandfather. 

The research in this area took an interesting turn when Cowper & Newton Museum Trustee, Amanda Molcher, drew attention to a legal document titled Newton v Scatliff in The National Archives. This document dated 1743 identifies the plaintiffs as John Newton, mariner of Limehouse, Middlesex and the defendants as Daniel Scatcliff and Samuel Scatcliff. From this document there is sufficient evidence to identify the plaintiff as John’s father, also named as John Newton. Newton Snr also names his father as Richard Newton.

As Newton’s parents were married by licence at the parish church of St Mary-le-Bow, we have also been able to locate their marriage allegation. In this we see that John Newton Snr makes a sworn statement that both he and Elizabeth are over the age of 21, living in the parish of Stepney and  there is no known impediment to the marriage.

Thorough searches of archives and records led to new investigations and possibilities:

  • An earlier business relationship between the Newton and Scatliff families
  • How Newton’s parents likely met.
  • An insight into the inheritance Newton was told he was to receive when the captain of the Greyhound persuaded him to return to Britain from Africa in 1747.
  • Evidence to show that neither Richard Newton nor Simon Scatliff were actually the grandfathers. of John Newton. This leads to the possibility that Elizabeth Scatliff’s father was not Simon Scatliff.

Find out more in the accompanying paper available from this link: John Newton 300: Birth, Baptism and Genealogy

Transcript of the Vicar General Marriage Allegation for John Newton Snr and Elizabeth Scatliff dated 23rd September 1724 Society of Genealogists / Lambeth Palace Library
St Mary le Bow
Nicholls, Sutton, and printmaker. Bow Church [Graphic]. Published according to act of Parliament, 1754, for Stowes Survey, 0AD. https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/11001371.
John Boyell, 1751 The British Museum

Sources, Bibliography and further reading: 

A short biography of the Life of John Newton, Cowper & Newton Museum

John Newton in Liverpool – From slaver to customs official Jim Kenny, Darren White, 2021, bygoneliverpool.wordpress.com

John Newton in Liverpool, Part 2. Locations and connections Jim Kenny, Darren White, 2022, bygoneliverpool.wordpress.com

The John Newton Project

An Authentic Narrative of Some Remarkable and Interesting Particulars in the Life of The Rev. John Newton. 1825 edition

John Newton Authorised Biography,  Richard Cecil updated by Marylynne Rouse, 1970,

Records of Old Gravel Lane, St George’s East, London, Denomination: Independent: Births and Baptisms (1704-1837), National Archives via Ancestry.co.uk

Sermons upon various subjects, preached to young people on New Years Days,
David Jennings,

Sermons, Discourses and Essays on Various Subjects, Isaac Watts

Amazing Grace: The Story of America’s Most Beloved Song, Steve Turner, 2002

Probate wills, The National Archives Discovery

London Land Tax Records, The London Archive

Marriage Allegation, Society of Genealogists

 

Author Credit:

My name is Jim Kenny. I am a researcher, writer and graphic designer based in Liverpool. I have had the pleasure to work with the Cowper & Newton Museum since I co-researched John Newton’s life in Liverpool with Darren White. This was for our website Bygone Liverpool which includes two extensive online articles.

We then worked with Cowper & Newton Museum to create new articles and virtual stories of Newton’s life in Liverpool for Amazing Grace 250, an eighteen month project and programme supported by National Lottery Heritage Fund, Arts Council England and Milton Keynes City Council, which connected with communities around the world to explore Newton’s inspiration behind the writing of the hymn and what it means to people today.

During the course of our research, we uncovered some previously unknown (or perhaps unpublished) aspects of Newton’s early life. Some of these new findings add to, clarify, and in some cases correct previous histories of Newton’s fascinating life.

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