At the age of 16, Fisher took a job as a hotel clerk in
Norwalk, Ohio. After a year, he served an apprenticeship for four years in carriage building. In 1885, Fisher came to
Detroit,
Michigan to work for the C.R. & J.C. Wilson Carriage Co. Fisher moved on to study in Chicago and Boston. He returned to Detroit in 1888 and rejoined the Wilson company as superintendent. He eventually bought out his partner and continued the business alone. The company was notable for building the first fleet of wagons for the
Detroit News in 1894. Henry Ford was a customer of Standard Wagon Works and had commissioned Fisher to build the body for "Ford's Contraption". Ford asked Fisher to build 50 bodies, offering payment in the form of stock in his company, the same payment he was offering the
Dodge Brothers to build motors. The conservative Fisher considered the offer too speculative and insisted on cash. Fisher's business continued to grow as he built bodies for
Oldsmobile and other new automobile manufacturers. In 1902, at Albert's suggestion, Albert's nephew
Fred Fisher, son of Lawrence Fisher, came to Detroit seeking employment. Fred found work as a draftsman at C. R. Wilson Company, joined by his brother
Charles Fisher in 1904. The brothers worked there until 1908, when they quit over a salary dispute. Albert offered Fred and Charles jobs in his carriage shop and the brothers gratefully accepted.
Fisher Body Co On July 22, 1908, Albert, Fred and Charles Fisher formed the
Fisher Body Co., capitalized at $50,000, with $30,000 cash paid in by Albert.
Walter Flanders, a partner in
E-M-F Company, suggested that the new company build an inexpensive closed car body. Closed cars at that time were not only expensive but were considered undesirable by Ford. As Fred and Charles began to experiment with closed sedan bodies, Albert not only protested but soon wanted out of the new venture altogether. Albert's share of the company was bought out by
Louis Mendelssohn in 1909.
Standard Motor Truck Co In 1910, Fisher incorporated the Standard Motor Truck Co. He became the sole owner of the company in 1915. He continued to manufacture trucks at the factory at 1111 Bellevue Street in Detroit until a few years before his death. ==Later Years and Death==