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AMERICA'S OLDEST WORKER
Here is a story which featured on ABC News around December
2001. It illustrates that attitude is everything and
if you love life any obstacles that come in your way,
including age, can be overlooked.
It's no wonder, then, that the 100-year-old architect
- who still works five days a week at the Michigan firm
he founded - is being honored in Washington, D.C., today
as "America's Oldest Worker."
Fisher, a native of Grosse Pointe, Mich., is receiving
the award from Green Thumb, a national non-profit organization
that provides job training and employment to America's
seniors. The presentation takes place at the American
Institute of Architects, of which Fisher is a member
emeritus.
Specializing in church architecture, Fisher started
Harold H. Fisher & Associates in 1945 outside Detroit.
Since then, he has designed nearly 500 churches in Michigan,
the Midwest and around the country. They have provided
places of worship for the members of 50 different religious
denominations.
Asked how he feels to be recognized for still showing
up to work at his age, Fisher chuckled. "I just
kept on living," he said. "I love my work,
I love designing. It's kept me alive."
Fisher, born October 28, 1901, got his first taste of
church architecture as an apprentice earning $2 a day
in Uniontown, Pa. He credits his solid training in classical
architecture to his studies at the Beaux Arts Institute
of Design in New York.
Two of Fisher's personal favorites among his work in
his native Detroit area are St. Lazarus Serbian Orthodox
Church Ravanica and Westminster Presbyterian Church,
his first major project. With hundreds of churches under
his belt, Fisher insists that no two of his designs
are alike. But all of them, he hopes, help people feel
welcome in their faith and draw them closer to their
church.
"When you say you'll find peace and closeness to
Christ within the church, you have to have that in the
design," Fisher said.
One of his first stops in Washington after arriving
early for the awards ceremony this weekend was a place
he cites as one of his favorite inspirations: Washington's
majestic National Cathedral. He recalled the first visit
he made to the nation's capital to marvel at its architectural
beauty at age 30 - way back in 1931.
Fisher says he still wakes up every day with new ideas
and that even after 85 years in the business, he's still
learning. "Designing is thrilling to me and I have
designs running through my head all the time,"
he said. "I don't think of it as work."
After living through just about all of the 20th century,
doesn't the country's oldest worker ever consider the
leisurely and quiet life of retirement? Not in his lifetime.
"If I would retire, what would I retire to?"
he asked puzzled. "I'm doing what I love to do."
Fisher tries to inspire his fellow seniors on the importance
of finding something to wake up for every day. "If
they have something that will keep them working, they
don't die of despair," he said. "You have
to be interested and keep busy."
Outside of work, Fisher keeps his body active with twice-a-week
workouts at the gym (which he joined at age 70). He
also recently took up yoga with one of his nine children,
the oldest of whom is now 75. For someone who says he
can hardly wait every day to get to the office, having
reached an age to become the oldest working American
is an achievement Fisher has barely noticed.
"I'm only 100 and I'm on my way to 110 at least,"
Fisher said smiling. "Death isn't on my mind at
all."
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