Background
Fisher was born in Croydon, London on 22 September 1879.
Fisher was born in Croydon, London on 22 September 1879.
He was educated at the Dragon School (Oxford), Winchester College and Hertford College, Oxford University.
He matriculated in 1898, graduating with a first class degree in Classical Moderations in 1900 and a second in Greats in 1902. After failing to get into the Indian Civil Service and the medical examination for the Royal Navy, he came a lowly 15th in the Inland Revenue entrance exams in 1903. Sixteen years later he was Permanent Secretary of the Treasury and the first ever Head of the Home Civil Service.
Fisher has been described as one of the most influential British civil servants of his generation
Fisher gave the Civil Service a cohesion it previously lacked and did more to reform it than any man in the preceding fifty years.
He increased the importance of the Treasury. He advanced the interests of women in the civil service and at one point described himself as a feminist.
His generally unsuccessful attempts to gain a say in Foreign Office appointments were much resented, and gave rise to unfounded accusations that he had been an appeaser (despite a robust defence of his reputation by the arch-antiappeaser Lord Robert Vansittart). When she died in 1970 she was almost penniless, having been defrauded by a couple named Lawless in the 1950s.