Background
His father, serving in the Continental Army at Morristown, New Jersey, died of disease just before his birth. His mother was living at the time with her brother-in-law, Doctor Samuel Ware, in Sunderland, Massachusetts. He lived for a few years with his mother in Dedham, Massachusetts and in 1782 went to Conway, to live with his uncle, Doctor Ware, who had adopted him, and where he remained till he went to college.
Education
He studied at Williams College, graduating in 1799.
Career
He taught school in Conway and then became head of Deerfield Academy in 1800. He was next a tutor at Williams College from 1801 to 1803, meanwhile studying divinity. Her cousin of the same name was the inspiration for the founding of the first school for the deaf in the United States.
She died in 1850.
He received a license to preach from the Berkshire Association in 1804 and was ordained as a pastor in Wilton, Connecticut. A series of pastorates in New York and New Jersey followed. Meanwhile, Fisher received a doctorate in divinity from Princeton University in 1827.
He was elected the first moderator of the New School General Assembly at Philadelphia in 1838.
He died on December 27, 1856 in Succasunna, New Jersey and was buried New Year"s Day, 1857 in Paterson, New Jersey.