Purling’s background and parentage are uncertain, but he may be the Mr. or Captain John Purling, native of St. Helena, who was permitted by the East India Company to travel thither in 1750 at his own expense, arriving on 12 Mar. 1751.
In 1770 he purchased the Bradford Peverell estate in Dorset, and the same year became a candidate for the notoriously corrupt and expensive borough of New Shoreham in opposition to two other East Indians, Thomas Rumbold and William James. Though Purling came out second on the poll he was declared elected by the returning officer (alarmed at Rumbold’s wholesale bribery) but was unseated on petition. In 1772 Purling was returned unopposed for East Looe on the interest of John Buller senior. In the House he supported Administration. The name of the first ship he commanded suggests that he was early patronized by Sandwich, whose lead he followed in Parliament.
When in 1772 the East India Company ran into financial difficulties, Purling as its chairman was much criticized for misleading the proprietors about their position, though his responsibility was largely nominal, since the control of the Company’s affairs really rested with Sulivan and Sir George Colebrooke. In 1773 he refused to stand for re-election, and in a speech in the House on 23 Mar. 1773, welcoming parliamentary investigation into the Company’s affairs,
[he] made his declaration of not being a candidate for the direction ... until his conduct has been inquired into. This drew from Lord North a compliment approving and applauding his resolution.
J. Caillaud to Warren Hastings, 31 Mar. 1773, Add. 29133, ff. 493-5.
His only other reported speech in this Parliament, also on East India matters, was on 18 June 1773.
In 1774 he took the lead in pressing for the compensation of East India commanders adversely affected by the shipping reforms accompanying the Regulating Act of 1773.
In 1774 and at his subsequent elections Purling was returned unopposed for Weymouth. He continued to support Administration till the fall of North, though ill-health prevented his attendance during the crucial divisions of February-March 1782.
Purling died 23 Aug. 1800, aged 78.
