Punchard, Alan, son of William Albert Punchard of Beckenham, Kent, and Lucy, d. of John Henry Wills of Wadebridge, Cornwall; b. 2 Apr. 1924; adm. Sept. 1938 (B); left July 1941; RM in WW2 (Capt. ), Combined Ops; Lieut. RMFVR Dec. 1948, Capt. May 1954, Maj. 1962; VRD 1958, retd. 1968; a chartered accountant, ACA 1948, FCA 1958; m. 21 Sept. 1957 Margaret Aiken, d. of John Eunson of Shetland; d. 5 Mar. 2013.
Pulvertaft, Thomas Charles Bryan, brother of Robert James Valentine Pulvertaft (q.v.); b. July 13, 1899; adm. Sept. 26, 1912 (H); left July 1917; 2nd Lieut. Labour Corps Sept. 5, 1918; a merchant in India; m. Dec. 10, 1925, Nancy Macfarlane, daughter of James Worrall, of Monasterevan, co. Kildare, Ireland; d. in Ireland July 15, 1945.
Pulvertaft, Robert James Valentine, son of Rev. Thomas John Pulvertaft of Cork and Barbara Charlotte, d. of James Waddock Denroche of Skibereen, Ireland; b. 14 Feb. 1897; adm. Sept. 1910 (H); left July 1915; elected to Trin. Coll. Camb. 1915, matric. 1919, BA 1921; Sussex Regt 1915-7 (Lieut.), RFC 1917 (FO); St Thom. Hosp. Med. Sch., MRCS LRCP 1923, MB BCh 1924; Reader in Pathology Univ. of London 1931, Plimmer res. Fellow 1929-32; MD 1933, FRCP 1938, FRCPath 1963; RAMC 1940-5 (Lieut.-Col.), OBE (Middle East) Jan. 1944; Prof. of Clinical Pathology Univ. of London 1950-62; Pres. Assn of Clinical Pathologists 1953; hon. consult. to the Army at home 1955; John Mallet Purser lecturer Univ. of Dublin 1959; visiting Prof. of Pathology Univ. Coll. Makerere, Uganda, and Ibadan Univ., Nigeria, 1962; hon. FRSM 1972; m. 14 May 1922 Elizabeth Lilian Mary Costello of Dunmore, Co. Galway; d. 30 Mar. 1990.
PULTENEY, WILLIAM, 1ST EARL OF BATH, son of Col. William Pulteney, Misterton, Leics., and his first wife Mary Floyd; nephew of John Pulteney (qv); b. 22 Mar 1684; adm.; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 31 Oct 1700; Grand Tour (Italy) 1704-5; MP Hedon 1705-34, Middlesex 1734 – 14 Jul 1742; Secretary at War 25 Sep 1714 – 11 Apr 1717; one of the committee of secrecy concerning the peace negotiations Apr 1715; Privy Councillor 16 Jul 1716; one of the “three grand allies”; declined peerage in lieu of office 1721; Cofferer of the Household 28 May 1723 – Apr 1725, dismissed after quarrel with Walpole; alled himself with Bolingbroke and wrote for The Craftsman; joined Wyndham and became a “patriot”; author of pamphlet On the State of the National Debt, 1727; quarrelled with John Hervey, Lord Hervey (qv), with whom he fought a duel in Green Park 25 Jan 1731; leader of the parliamentary opposition to Walpole; struck off the Privy Council 1 Jul 1731; refused to form a ministry on Walpole’s downfall, but entered Lord Wilmington’s Cabinet without office and was readm. to Privy Council 20 Feb 1742; created Earl of Bath 14 Jul 1742; his acceptance of a peerage diminished his political significance; lampooned by Sir Charles Hanbury Williams in a series of odes; endeavoured to form an administration at George II’s request, and accepte post of First Lord of the Treasury 10 Feb 1746, but his short-lived ministry only lasted two days, and he never held political office again; Lord Lieut., Yorkshire East Riding 7 Dec 1721 – 15 Jul 1728, Shropshire from 13 Jul 1761; a brilliant parliamentary orator and great debater; a scholar and a versatile and witty writer; gave £50 towards the New Dormitory; m. 27 Dec 1714 Anna Maria, dau. of John Gumley MP, Isleworth, Middlesex, Commissary-Gen. to the Army; d. 7 Jul 1764. Buried Islip Chapel, Westminster Abbey. DNB.
PULTENEY, WILLIAM, VISCOUNT PULTENEY, only son of William Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath (qv); bapt. 9 Jan 1731; adm. (aged 9) Apr 1740; left 1747; Grand Tour 1748-51; MP Old Sarum 1754-61, Westminster from 1761; Lieut. -Col., 85th Foot 1759; Lord of Bedchamber to George III from 21 Mar 1761; ADC to King from 16 Jan 1763; d. unm. at Madrid, Spain 12 Feb 1763. Buried Islip Chapel, Westminster Abbey.
PULTENEY, JOHN, youngest son of Sir William Pulteney, Kt, MP, Westminster, and Grace, youngest dau. of Sir John Corbet, Bart., Stoke, Shropshire; b.; at school under Busby (Wood, Athenae Oxon., iv, 662); Christ Church, Oxford, matr. (check ) 1677; Under Secretary, Secretary of State’s Office Sep 1689 – Mar 1692; Second Secretary to Lords Justices of Ireland Oct – Dec 1690; acting Clerk of Privy Council (I) 1690-1, Clerk of Privy Council (I) from 1691; Secretary to Lord Lieut. Ireland Sep 1692 – Jul 1693; MP (I) Co. Wexford 1692-3; Secretary to Master-Gen. of Ordnance 1693-1702; Clerk of Deliveries, Ordnance 15 Feb 1701- Jun 1703; MP Hastings 1695-1710; a Commissioner of Trade Apr 1707 – Jun 1711; a Commissioner of Customs 1714-22; Surveyor-Gen. of Crown Lands from 1722; m. Lucy, second dau. of Thomas Colwell, Alderman of London; d. 23 May 1726.
PULTENEY, JOHN, elder son of Rev. Richard Fawcett DD, Vicar of Newcastle-on-Tyne, and Prebendary of Durham, and Elizabeth Brown; bapt. Grendon, Warwicks. 9 Nov 1766 (IGI); adm. 27 Apr 1778; KS (aged 12) 1779; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1783, matr. 26 Jun 1783, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1783 – void 15 Feb 1787; damages of £7, 000 were awarded against him in May 1802 in suit for crim. con. brought by George Markham (adm. 1769, qv); assumed surname of Pulteney in lieu of Fawcett by royal licence 9 Aug 1813, “from grateful and affectionate regard to the memory of Henrietta Laura Pulteney, Countess of Bath”; m. 8 Aug 1803 Elizabeth Evelyn, divorced wife of George Markham (adm. 1769, qv), and sister of John Sutton (adm. 1779, qv); d. 24 Jun 1849.
PULTENEY, HARRY, brother of William Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath (qv); b. 14 Feb 1686; at school under Knipe (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1757); Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 25 Mar 1704; Lieut. and Capt., 23 Feb 1709; Capt. and Lieut. -Col., 2nd Foot Guards 22 Jul 1715; Second Maj. and Col., 3 Aug 1733; First Maj., 30 Oct 1734; Col., 13th Foot, 5 Apr 1739 – Jun 1766; Brigadier-Gen., 18 Feb 1742; Major-Gen., 3 Jul 1743; Lieut. -Gen., 8 Aug 1747; Gen., 22 Feb 1765; Equerry to George I and George II 20 Nov 1714 – res by 3 Nov 1743; MP Hedon 5 Nov 1722-34, 24 Nov 1739-41, Kingston-upon-Hull 2 May 1744-7; Governor of Hull 1739 - Jun 1766; served in Flanders 1742; inherited estates of his elder brother Lord Bath 1764; d. 26 Oct 1767.
PULTENEY, DANIEL, eldest son of John Pulteney (at school under Busby, qv); bapt. St. Martin’s in the Fields 26 Sep 1682 (IGI); at school under Knipe (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1727/8); Christ Church, Oxford, fellow commoner, matr. 15 Jul 1699, aged 15 (sic); Grand Tour (Netherlands, Germany) 1704-6; Envoy to Denmark 1706-15; a Commissioner of Trade Jul 1717 – Oct 1721; MP Tregony 23 Mar – 10 Oct 1721, Hedon 7 Nov 1721-2, Preston from 1722; a Lord of the Admiralty 10 Oct 1721 – Jun 1725; Clerk of the Privy Council (I) from 1726; an implacable opponent of Sir Robert Walpole; his failure to overthrow Walpole so preyed upon his spirits that it “threw him into an irregularity of drinking that occasioned his death” (Coxe, Walpole, ii, 558-60); gave £50 towards the New Dormitory; m. 26 Dec 1717 Margaret Deering, dau. of Benjamin Tichborne, Tichborne, Hampshire; d. 7 Sep 1731. Buried St. James’s, Westminster, but remains subsequently transferred to South Cloister, Westminster Abbey. DNB.
Pulman, Peter Stewart, brother of Frederick George Pulman (qv); b. 23 Jan. 1923; adm. Sept. 1936 (A); left July 1939; RE in WW2 (Capt.); was man. dir. George Pufman & Sons; lives in Mallorca; m. 12 Aug. 1948 Ann Patricia, d. of Victor Arnold-Jones of Shanghai; d. 1996.