Education
He studied law there with his older brother, Charles Fisher, before moving to Woodstock in 1841 to practice on his own.
He studied law there with his older brother, Charles Fisher, before moving to Woodstock in 1841 to practice on his own.
He held this position through twenty-four consecutive annual elections. Fisher was born in Fredericton in 1820. On June 25, 1850, Fisher married Mary Catherine Demill at the Wesleyan Chapel.
In 1865, Fisher was appointed Judge of Probate, an office he held until his death.
In 1868, a railway branch from Debec, New Brunswick to Woodstock was opened. L.P. Fisher suddenly became ill at 84 and died within two days on October 9, 1905.
His will bequeathed an estate of almost half a million dollars to public purposes, including the creation of the L. P. Fisher Public Library, the Fisher Memorial School, the Carleton County Vocational School and the Fisher Memorial Hospital.