Although he never received a formal educational degree, Fisher became farmer, miner, and journalist in his home Rowan County. His father was a politician for 28 years, much of which time Fisher supported him as copublisher of the
Western Carolinian. A
Democrat, Fisher won his first political office in 1854, when Rowan County voters elected him as a state senator. The following year, Fisher became president of the
North Carolina Railroad, succeeding former governor
John Morehead. While still the railroad's president, he was also selected as its principal contractor to build a line to
Morganton, North Carolina. Slow construction progress and high costs produced considerable criticism, particularly from
Jonathan Worth (businessman, lawyer,
Whig legislator and president of the competing
Fayetteville and Western Plank Road Company). In 1859, despite Worth's continued criticism, the railroad's stockholders (including Whigs) re-elected Fisher as its president. Fisher became friends with Vermont-born Sewall Lawrence Fremont (née Fish, 1816–1886), a former U.S. Army artilleryman who had become chief engineer and superintendent of the
Wilmington and Weldon Railroad in eastern North Carolina in 1854. ==American Civil War==