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who designed churches in forty-three of the then forty-eight states. The fifteen-year-old Fisher was recruited by Fulton to work as an apprentice draughtsman for $ 2 per day in his
Uniontown, Pennsylvania office in the fall of 1916. Fisher had misrepresented his age as 27 so he could be hired. He
209:'s factories for wartime production. At the war's end, he finally fulfilled his dream by establishing Harold H. Fisher & Associates, an architectural firm devoted entirely to church architecture. That office was as of 2012 run by his sons until 2010.
151:, to Charles and Emma (McCoy) Fisher. He had a difficult childhood, being partially raised in an orphanage when his father was forced to leave the family to look for work and his mother could not feed her children.
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In the early 1940s Fisher tried to establish his own firm once again, but WWII had started. As a result he began working for the Austin company and
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Fisher was prolific in drawing and painting. His childhood oil paintings of biblical events attracted the attention of architect
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University of
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worked six days per week as an apprentice. At night and on weekends he studied Beaux-Arts courses at the
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ABC NEWS - Oldest Worker: At 100, Architect Still
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Fisher worked until he was 102. He received an award for being the oldest working man.
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In 1922 he and a colleague, Charles Hines, started their own architectural office in
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