Daniel H. Pulcifer

Daniel H. Pulcifer (November 16, 1834 January 19, 1896) was an American public official, printer, and politician.

Born in Vergennes, Vermont, Pulcifer learned the printing trade. In 1855, Pulcifer moved to the town of Oasis, Waushara County, Wisconsin and then moved to Shawano, Wisconsin. He served as Wisconsin Circuit Court clerk for Shawano County, Wisconsin. He also served as sheriff for Shawano County. Pulcifer was the deputy United States marshal and the United States Post Office inspector. Pulcifer served as mayor of Shawano, Wisconsin. In 1867 and 1879, Pulcifer served in the Wisconsin State Assembly and was a Republican. He then served as sergeant-at-arms for the Wisconsin Assembly. Pulcifer died suddenly of heart disease in Shawano. The community of Pulcifer, Wisconsin, in Shawano County, was named after him.[1][2]

Notes

  1. 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1879,' Biographical Sketch of Daniel H. Pulcifer, pg. 500-501
  2. 'D. H. Pulcifer Dead,' The Weekly Wisconsin (Milwaukee, Wisconsin), January 25, 1896, pg. 1


gollark: Limit copyright to 10 years or so, with an extension if you give the copyright office the "source code" to release publicly when it's up.
gollark: So the idea is that *you* pick a value for your patent, and anyone who is willing to put up that much money can buy it off you.
gollark: One of them was to make it so you had to pay some % of your patent's value to keep it (probably an increasing-over-time amount). Now, you might say "hmm but how do you assess value", which is an entirely reasonable concern.
gollark: There are various interesting proposals for adjusting them.
gollark: I mean, we have patent laws for that, no? They could use tweaking too.
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