Between 1911 and 1915, Pullum won 192 British and world weightlifting records, won 15 British Championships, and was awarded 53 gold medals. Acting as an
Olympic coach and technical adviser to the
British Amateur Weight Lifters' Association, he and his pupils held 222 out of a possible 252 records. At the onset of
World War I, Pullum was appointed by the British military authorities to take charge of the conditioning of physically rejected recruits. His conditioning program produced a 95 percent success rate, This led to other fitness training assignments doled out by the
British government. Following World War I, Pullum played London's
music halls, duplicating a number of feats made famous by the Saxon Trio. His "Challenge Dumbbell" with its large diameter grip and weighed 185 pounds, was bent-pressed by his right arm, before cleaning-and pressing a 62-pound
kettlebell with his left arm. This equated close to a double-bodyweight lift. At age 42, retiring undefeated in strength competition, Pullum's two books; "Weight-Lifting Made Easy and Interesting," and "How to Use a Barbell," became standard textbooks. ==Return to training==