
Henry Fisher
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enry
Fisher, a native of Pennsylvania, went into the oil fields soon after
the first well was struck in that state, and at once became interested
in producing petroleum. In company with his two brothers he had the first
pipe line ever put down through the oil-producing district. This line
and others, which were laid later, were bought by the men who started
the Standard Oil Company. When the business was in its earlier stages
there was no pipeline from Oil City to Pittsburgh, but all the oil was
sent down the river by tugboats. The Fisher Oil Company, of which Henry
Fisher was a member until a year and a half ago, is the oldest in the
United States. Mr. Fisher's two brothers are still members of this company
and there is only one man interested in the stock of the company who is
not a Fisher. Its business has always been that of a producer, not of
a refiner.
Mr.
Fisher's return to California last fall, when he decided to become a permanent
resident of Redlands, was his fifth trip to this state. A residence for
himself and family is at present being built on Highland Avenue and San
Mateo. This residence will be of a style of architecture new in Redlands,
Moorish in design with a patio in the center, covered by a stained glass
roof and containing an electric fountain. The roof of the house itself
will be of tiles. The building will be cemented on the outside, the towers
and similar portions being decorated with stucco and staff work.
Mr. Fisher, having
disposed of his oil interests, is at present largely interested in the
electrical developments now being made in Southern California. He is president
of the Southern California Power Company, a director in the Lytle Creek
Light and Power Company and in the Redlands
Electric Light and Power Company, and is interested in other companies
of the same sort in Pasadena and Los Angeles.
(Source:
Illustrated Redlands, p. 11.)
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