Bensley, the son of a printer in
The Strand, had printing premises at Bolt Court, off
Fleet Street in London, and
William Bulmer was considered his only rival in fine printing. In a preface Bensley complains of a fire which had destroyed his premises, with much of his stock; he was burned out on two separate occasions, in 1807 and 1819. Works from the press included
Thomas Macklin's folio Bible in seven volumes (1800), an edition of
David Hume's
History of England, and an octavo Shakespeare. A trustee of Providence Chapel, in Gray's Inn Lane, Bensley supported the ministry of
William Huntington; and helped to raise the monument by
Sir Richard Westmacott on the death of Huntington in 1813. He printed
The Posthumous Letters of William Huntington (1822), which he also edited in part. ==Development of the press==