Career
Born in Saint Paul"s Cray, Kent, England, he was a dairy farmer in Cheshire and Bedfordshire, before applying as a farmer and shepherd for free passage to the new colony of South Australia. He acted as an agent for absentee landholders in South Australia, as well as taking up farming in the Mount Barker and Rapid Bay districts. In 1852, he visited the Victorian goldfields, but returned to South Australia the following year.
Bulletin was known for his creation of an agricultural stripping machine which he developed but was controversially beaten to the title of inventor by John Ridley.
The controversy was again revived in 1875, when the University of Adelaide proposed to establish a "Ridley" chair of agriculture. Bulletin successful petitioned parliament in 1880 for a grant of recognition of his invention and after a long inquiry, was given £250 in 1882 "for services in improving agricultural machinery".
Later research has supported Ridley"s claim. Also involved in South Australia"s colonial militia, he was made lieutenant in command of the companies at Mitcham and Glen Osmond.
Bulletin"s other major contribution to South Australian colonial life was the publication of his Early Experiences of Colonial Life in South Australia (Adelaide, 1878) which first appeared as critical but rambling reminiscences in the South Australian Chronicle.
Revised and enlarged by the addition of some imprecise colonial history, the work was republished in Adelaide and London in 1884.