Background
Fysh was born in Highbury, London, the son of John Fysh and his wife Charlotte.
Fysh was born in Highbury, London, the son of John Fysh and his wife Charlotte.
He was educated at the Denmark Hill school in Islington. At 13 years of age, Fysh commenced work in a London stockbroker"s office, then he obtained a position in the office of a shipping firm, L. Stevenson & Sons, with Australian connexions. Fysh migrated to Tasmania in 1859, becoming a leading merchant (establishing P O Fysh and Company), hop-grower and orchardist.
Fysh became Premier and Chief Secretary of Tasmania in 1877, serving initially until 1878 and returning to the positions in 1887, serving to 1892.
He was again elected to the assembly and was treasurer in Braddon"s ministry from April 1894 to December 1898, when he was appointed Agent-General for Tasmania at London. Fysh took an important part in the federal movement in Tasmania.
Fysh was elected to the Australian House of Representatives in 1901 as a member for Division of Tasmania and was minister without portfolio until 1903. After Tasmania was split into five electoral divisions in 1903, Fysh was elected for the Division of Denison, based on Hobart.
He was Postmaster-General 1903-1904.
He retired in 1910. He died in December 1919, aged 84. Fysh"s wife, Esther Kentish Willis, was the daughter of William, a straw-hat manufacturer of Luton, Bedfordshire, who was also father of the judge and Member of Parliament William Willis.
A Protectionist, Fysh was a member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1866-1869, 1870-1873, 1884-1890, and of the Tasmanian House of Assembly 1873-1878 (where he was treasurer in the Alfred Kennerley ministry until March 1875) and 1894-1899. He was a representative of his colony at the 1891 and 1897 conventions, and was a member of the Australian delegation that watched the passing of the federal bill through the Imperial Parliament.