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and his mode of speaking of them, were abusive and unbecoming. The synod had a conference with him privately, and allowed him several days to consider and prepare a written acknowledgment of his misdemeanours. His paper was accepted pro tanto, and he was suspended for three
Sabbaths.* His confession was to be read on the third Sabbath after the sentence, from the pulpit in Newark, in part, so far as related to his offences there. He was to own the confession publicly, and then to be absolved. On the day appointed, no minister being present, he read his confession and absolved himself. The synod refused to acknowledge such a proceeding, and remitted the case to Long Island Presbytery, with Dickinson, Morgan, and Pierson as correspondents. Regardless of the synod, he preached at East Chester. The committee, in October, 1723, were informed (by letter and otherwise) of several scandalous allegations against him, and continued his suspension. When Morgan rose to give him an exhortation, he exclaimed against their conclusion, renounced all subjection to them, told them he wanted no exhortation from them, and rushed away in an angry manner.
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He had been preaching at
Crosswicks; and the Presbytery of Philadelphia, in his absence, took the testimony, suspended him, and published the sentence from the pulpit in which he had preached. Subsequently the charges against him were regularly adjudicated and proved. His conduct to the presbytery,
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Walton studied for the ministry. He preached in various places, and also practised as a physician, besides serving in the
General Assembly of Rhode Island. The dates of his birth and death are not known. See Dexter's Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Yale College, pp.
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Walton... studied for the ministry, preached as
Presbyterian at Freehold, N. J., later as a Baptist at Providence, R. I., 1730. He became a physician and settled in Gloucester, R. I., 1743, where he died, 1764.”—H. Ruth Cooke in
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in 1716, and there was "baptized and admitted to membership in the
Congregational Church of Preston, North Parish", before he graduated in 1720, making him "the only Baptist minister to graduate from Yale" in that period.
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In 1725, he requested the synod to leave his case to the
Presbytery of Long Island; but they consigned it to the same committee as before. He went to West Chester county, and preached at Rye and White Plains.
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Immediately he advertised that he would teach in New York, on Broad Street, near the
Exchange, Latin, Greek, and Hebrew; and that during the winter he would keep an evening school.
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From 1741 to 1742, he served as King's
Attorney in Providence County. He threafter served for periods as a justice of the Peace and as a deputy for Gloucester in the
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He worked as a teacher and a minister, though in 1722 he was censured for "lustful carriage to some young women".
71:(1694 – 1764) was a Connecticut-born preacher and politician who ultimately served as a justice of the Colonial
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Walton also appears to have served one term in 1725 as a deputy to the
Connecticut General Assembly.
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New
England Dissent, 1630-1833: The Baptists and the Separation of Church and State, Volume 1
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Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/United States judges and justices
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Walton very nearly put an end to his legal career in 1738 when he appeared in the case of
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A history of the Presbyterian Church in America from its origin until the year 1760
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In 1749, he became an associate justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court.
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The Greenes of Rhode Island: With Historical Records of English Ancestry
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Samuel H. Allen, "Rhode Island Judiciary", in James N. Arnold, ed.,
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Manual - the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
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Manual - the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
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