Benjamin Pulleyne,sometimes speltPullan (30 September 1785 – 20 October 1861), was a mathematician,Church of England clergyman, fellow ofClare College, Cambridge, andschoolmaster. For almost fifty years he was the Master ofGresham's School, then usually known as Holt Grammar School.
Born atScarborough, North Yorkshire, the son of Benjamin Pullan, a merchant, and his wife Elizabeth,[1][2] the young Pulleyne (the spelling of the name he used for himself) was educated atWakefield Grammar School and was admitted to Clare College, Cambridge, on 2 February 1804.[3]He was elected a Cave Scholar on 19 January 1805 and wasSenior Optime in 1808.[4]
He graduatedBA in 1808, promoted by seniority toMA in 1811, and was a Fellow of his college from 1808 to 1809. Becoming adeacon of the Church of England in 1808, he was ordained as a priest in 1810 byHenry Bathurst,Bishop of Norwich.[3] This was at a time when most academics at Oxford were obliged to lead celibate lives in college and had to resign their fellowships if they wished to marry.
Pulleyne wasMaster of Holt Grammar School from 1809 to 1857,[3] the salary for which was £200 a year.[5] Having held the post for 48 years, he remains the school's longest-serving head since its foundation in 1555.[6] He was also Vicar ofSheringham from 1825 until his death, and ofWeybourne from 1845.[3]John William Burgon, inThe Life and Times of Sir Thomas Gresham (1839), says
Holt school... is an ornament and a blessing to the county, and reflects much credit on the trustees and its worthy principal—the Rev. B. Pulleyne.[7]
At thecensus of March 1851, Pulleyne was living at 38, Market Place, Holt, with his wife Rebecca, who was blind, his son Walter M. Pulleyne, aged 34, anapothecary, his daughter in law, his seven-year-old granddaughter Anne, and two servants.[8] His wife, Rebecca Pulleyne, died at Holt on 13 March 1853.[9] On 12 July of the same year, atBuckenham, Norfolk, Pulleyne married Mary Dinah Partridge, a farmer's daughter.[2][10]
Having retired from his school, Pulleyne then lived at Sheringham, where he died in October 1861. He left a widow, Mary Dinah.[11]