Born in
Highgate, Birmingham and educated at
King Edward's School in Birmingham and
Trinity College, Cambridge, Benson began his career as a schoolmaster at
Rugby School in 1852. In 1859 Benson was chosen by
Prince Albert as the first Master (headmaster) of
Wellington College, Berkshire, which had been built as the nation's memorial to the
Duke of Wellington. Benson was largely responsible for establishing Wellington as a great English public school, closely modelled on Rugby School, rather than the military academy originally planned. He later served as Chancellor of
Lincoln Minster from 1872-77, and
Bishop of Truro from 1877-82.
Benson told
Henry James a simple, rather inexpert story he had heard about the ghosts of evil servants who tried to lure young children to their deaths. James recorded the hint in his
Notebooks and eventually used it as the starting-point for his classic ghost story,
The Turn of the Screw. Benson died from
cardiovascular disease in 1896.