Pullan was born at Knaresborough on 27 March 1825. He was articled to Richard Lane in Manchester and in 1853 he worked with Sir
Matthew Digby Wyatt on the Medieval court at the
Great Exhibition. Royal Engineer
Robert Murdoch Smith was given the task of assisting. He was presented with the lion statue that had fallen onto its front face. The
limestone core of the monument was still there but the marble cladding and other details had either been stolen or lay around where it had fallen. Smith was able to replace and move each of the remaining stones Pullan created an orthographic drawing of the building. It is thought to be a good reproduction of what the whole structure would have looked like. The Lion of Knidos was loaded onto the naval ship
HMS Supply and shipped to London. It is now in the
British Museum. and on architecture, including
Elementary lectures on Christian architecture. On Burges's' death in 1881 the Pullans inherited
The Tower House in
Kensington, Burges's own home. In the following years, Pullan worked with a number of Burges's team, including
John Starling Chapple and
William Frame to complete some of Burges's unfinished works, including
Cardiff Castle and
Castell Coch, the fantasy palaces Burges had begun for
John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute. Pullan also authored two studies of Burges's work,
The House of W. Burges, A.R.A., in 1886 and
Architectural Designs of W. Burges, in 1887. Pullan died at Brighton on 30 April 1888. ==Notes==