Hendrick Fisher


Fisher represented Somerset County in the New Jersey Colonial Assembly, was one of three delegates representing New Jersey at the Stamp Act Congress in New York in 1765, was elected to New Jersey's Committee of Correspondence, served as a member of the Committee of Safety, was President of the Colonial Assembly, was the first President of the Provincial Congress of New Jersey in 1775, was labeled an arch traitor and "Enemy of the Crown", and a founder and first President of the board of trustees of Queen's College. His great-great grandson was Hendrick V. Fisher who was a businessman and had served in the Illinois General Assembly.
His death is engraved as 1779 on his gravestone, but historian A. Van Doren Honeyman believed it might have been an error and should have been 1778.
His homestead and grave are currently located near St. Andrew Memorial Church in Franklin Township, Somerset County, New Jersey.