[1][2] He was the eldest surviving son of Sir Edward Hulse, 3rd Baronet of Breamore House, Breamore, Hampshire, and was educated at Eton College (1782-9) and Christ Church, Oxford (1790), after which he studied law at Lincoln's Inn.
[1][2] He was commissioned as Captain of the Fordingbridge Yeomanry Cavalry in 1798, and was re-appointed in 1803 when the Volunteers were re-raised after the breakdown of the Peace of Amiens.
[2][3] He was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1812 to command the South-East Hampshire Local Militia.
[4] He succeeded his father to the baronetcy and to Breamore House on 30 September 1816.
[1][2] This article about a member of Parliament representing an English constituency is a stub.