Baldwin W. Fullmer

Baldwin W. Fullmer (May 6, 1834 May 21, 1910) was an American farmer, politician, newspaper editor, and Methodist minister.

Fullmer was born in Bertie, Canada West. In 1845, Fullmer emigrated with his parents to the United States and settled in Illinois. In 1846, Fullmer and his parents moved to Dodge County, Wisconsin Territory. He went to the public schools He then went to Lawrence University and Baylin & Lincoln Commercial College in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Fullmer joined the Methodist Conference and was ordained to the ministry. In 1876, Fullmer moved to Loyal, Clark County, Wisconsin. He was a farmer and taught school. Fullmer was also the editor of the Loyal Tribune newspaper. During the American Civil War, Fullmer served in the Union Army. He served as chairman of the Loyal Town Board and was a Republican. In 1893 and 1894, Fullmer served in the Wisconsin Assembly. In 1904, Fullmer moved to Webb Lake, Wisconsin. He died in Webb Lake, Wisconsin from diabetes.[1][2]

Notes

  1. 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1893,' Biographical Sketch of Baldwin W. Fullmer, pg. 637
  2. 'B. W. Fullmer-obituary,' Loyal Tribune, June 2, 1910
gollark: They must really dislike incdec.
gollark: Oh, and I tried some other websites with websockets and they work fine.
gollark: I tried to check with wireshark and mitmproxy to see what it was doing, but I don't see *any request* when it tries to connect.
gollark: This is interfering with my ability to operate osmarks internet radio™.
gollark: I checked with Node's `ws` package. *That* connects fine. *Chromium* connects fine. Firefox on my *phone* connects fine.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.