| US Patent: 17,169 
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| Machine for splitting wood | 
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| Patentee: |  |
 | Waterman L. Ormsby (exact or similar names) - Jersey City, NJ |  
 
 
 
 
| Manufacturer: |  | Not known to have been produced |  
 
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| Patent Dates: |  
| Granted: | Apr. 28, 1857 |  USPTO (New site tip)
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                        Jeff Joslin
 
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| Description: |  | According to the 1888 "Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography", Waterman Lilly Ormsby was an engraver. "He invented several ruling-machines, transfer-presses, and other implements that are used in bank-note engraving, a machine for engraving on steel called the 'grammagraph,' and one for splitting wood. He was a founder of the Continental bank-note company, which during the civil war and afterward executed a large amount of work for he U.S. Government; and the peculiar design of the five-dollar bank-note was largely the result of Mr. Ormsby's idea for the prevention of counterfeiting." |  |