JOSEPH
L. FISHER and MARGARET W. FISHER:
(1914-1992) (1921- )
PARTNERS IN LIVING RELIGION
Faith in Action
by George Kimmich Beach, Unitarian Universalist Minister
When he affiliated
with the Unitarian Universalist faith, Albert Schweitzer
characterized it as a way of "faith in action."
Joseph and Margaret FisherJoe and Peggy, as we have
always called them exemplify what Schweitzer had in
mind. Their spiritual and moral convictions have undergirded
a lifelong engagement in the civic, religious, and professional
institutions of their community and world. Religion for
them has always meant "faith in action."
Peggy Fisher first used the term "living religion"
in her outline for a young people's course on Unitarian
Universalist beliefs that she and Joe taught in their home
congregation. For a living religion, she suggested, the
Unitarian Universalist flaming chalice is an apt symbol:
an inner light that inspires caring and active service.
Joe and Peggy Fisher have reflected deeply on the meaning
of their activism. In the poetry and the essay-sermons here
published for the first time, they have shaped their reflections
into a vision of public and personal life. As Peggy notes
in her Preface, she and Joe initially outlined the series
and set to work. Their outline was enlarged to accommodate
new themes as they emerged. The book reflects the Fishers'
original plan: to begin by setting forth the theme of the
whole series ("Religion and Living"), and to conclude
with a review and a call to commitment ("Religion and
the Future"). The project took more than fifteen years
to complete.
I asked them why they had undertaken such an ambitious project.
They wanted, they said, to create together religious services
for their own and other congregations. They wanted to draw
upon their experience, relating religion to life as a whole.
Especially, they wanted to give strong, affirmative expression
to their liberal faith. With their rich store of familial,
professional, and voluntary experience, none have been better
qualified for such a task.
Margaret Winslow and Joseph Fisher met on a blind date,
in her home town, Indianapolis, on January 1, 1941. She
was a sophomore at Wellesley College; he had begun graduate
studies in economics at Harvard University. It was a whirlwind
romance: in April Joe proposed; a little more than a year
later, on June 27, 1942, they were married.
Joe was then working for the National Resources Planning
Board, in Alaska. (From the outset of his career serving
"the public interest" was his guiding ideal.)
Peggy transferred to Reed College in Portland, Oregon, to
be with Joe, whose office was moved to that city following
the Japanese attack on the Aleutian Islands during World
War II. The Fishers' first year of married life was spent
in Portland, where Peggy completed her Bachelor's degree
in French literature. Their first son was born four months
after her graduation and just two weeks before Joe left
for military service in the Pacific theater. At Pearl Harbor
Joe first worked on the logistics staff of Admiral Nimitz.
When that work was completed, he transferred to the Army
newspaper, Stars and Stripes, as an editor. He remained
in this position until the end of the war.
Joseph Lyman Fisher was born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island,
in 1914, one of two children in a Unitarian family. A trim
athlete, he was a skillful boxer and an avid wilderness
hiker and canoeist. He enrolled at Bowdoin College, in Brunswick,
Maine, graduating in 1935, and began his career as an economist
specializing in resource management. After the war, the
Fishers moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Joe continued
graduate studies in economics, receiving a doctorate from
Harvard University in 1947. The growing Fisher family then
moved to the nation's capitol, living in Falls Church initially
and in Arlington a little later. From 1947 to 1954 Joe was
Executive Officer and Senior Economist of the President's
Council of Economic Advisers. From 1954 to 1975 he worked
for a private research and educational foundation, Resources
for the Future, Inc., becoming its President in 1959.
Politics was a natural extension of his civic activism.
A Democrat and a leader in Arlingtonians for a Better Community,
a liberal political coalition, Joe was elected to the Arlington
County Board, on which he served for a decade, including
two terms as Chairman. During his political career he also
served as the Arlington representative on the Metropolitan
Washington Council of Governments and as member of the board
of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority; for
both he also served as Chairman.
Rep.
Joseph L. Fisher
Joe's
greatest political triumph came in 1974 when he upset the
eleven-term Republican incumbent, Joel Broyhill, in the
10th Congressional District of Virginia. In the House of
Representatives Joe soon established himself as a respected
expert on economic policy. By 1980 his original political
base in Arlington County had been diluted by a burgeoning
Republican majority in western Fairfax County; in the year
of "the Reagan revolution" he lost his bid for
reelection to Congress.
A staunch but never a doctrinaire liberal, Joe Fisher had
made a lasting mark on national and state politics. Richard
Pearson noted highlights of his career in an obituary article
in the Washington Post (February 20, 1992):
Mr. Fisher was named to the powerful House Ways and Means
Committee, and soon made a reputation for his work on
taxation, energy and budget policy, and he was chosen
by his committee chairman to coordinate seven task forces
that drafted the energy program that emerged from several
congressional and White House proposals.
In 1982, Mr. Fisher joined the cabinet of Gov. Charles
S. Robb as Virginia's secretary of human resources, a
post in which he was responsible for a $3.5 billion budget
and 20,000 employees in 15 agencies. Although he took
office at a time of economic retrenchment, he received
favorable reviews from critics spanning the political
spectrum.
Joe
remarked to me that the complexity of social needs and political
pressures made being Secretary of Human Resources for the
Commonwealth of Virginia the most difficult job he had ever
had. Yet far from avoiding large responsibilities, he relished
them. The depth of his knowledge of contemporary social
problems and his commitment to effective public programs
to address them is evident. Looking back upon his public
career, he took the greatest pride from his contributions
to federal environmental policy and his successful role
in creating the Bill of Rights for handicapped persons in
Virginia.
Education played a large part in Joe's and Peggy's lives,
extending their vocational identities. Together they enrolled
in the master of arts in Education program at George Washington
University. A 1952 graduation photo shows Joe and Peggy
standing with the Dean, Peggy's "second pregnant commencement"
barely disguised by her academic gown.
During these and subsequent years Peggy and Joe were raising
three daughters and four sons. With a husband so deeply
involved in civic life, many of the burdensand the
joys, she addsof raising the family fell to Peggy.
(Joe "uncomfortably" recalls the answer one of
their grade-school age daughters gave to a teacher's question
to the children about what their fathers did for a living.
She said, "My daddy goes to meetings.") Nevertheless,
Peggy found time to establish her own career as an artist,
an arts educator, and a poet.
When Joe's work took them to the capitol of Virginia, Peggy
entered Virginia Commonwealth University, in Richmond. There
she earned a bachelor of fine arts degree, refining her
skills as a painter and a teacher of painting. She has taught
painting at the Northern Virginia Community College and
the University of Virginia, and in the adult education program
in Arlington. For Peggy teaching art is a humanistic endeavor;
in her words, it is a way to "help people realize their
potential for creativity." She adds, "and people
are never too old to learn."
Her own landscapes, figure paintings, and family portraits,
in both oil and watercolor, are vibrant with color and feeling.
Her art reflects the places she has lived or visitedincluding
Greece, Indonesia, Italy, China, Ecuador, Mexico, and Columbia.
Most often they reflect her deep feeling for her "home
base"in Arlington and at their family retreats
in Loudoun County and Maine. Her poetry exhibits similar
qualities: clear, forceful expression of perceptions and
deeply felt values. She addresses the reader in her personal
voice; thus her poetry challenges us and evokes a personal
response. She has received awards from the New York Poetry
Forum and the National League of American Penwomen, in which
she has been an organizational leader.
A conservationist in her several communities, Peggy has
served as member and chair, since 1989, of the Goose Creek
Scenic River Advisory Board (to which she was appointed
by three Virginia governors), founding member of the Arlington
Beautification Committee, and member of the board of the
Preservation Society of Loudoun County and Keep Loudoun
Beautiful. Her civic and artistic achievements have been
recognized in several awards.
The partnership of Joe and Peggy Fisher has also been expressed
through their religious community, the Unitarian Church
of Arlington, where they have been active members and leaders
from its inception, in 1947. When their children were young,
they taught Sunday school classes. Joe was elected Chairman
of the Board of Trustees of the church, and later, to the
Board of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA). When
the position of UUA Moderator was suddenly vacated, creating
a leadership crisis, Joe was selected by his peers to fill
the position. He was subsequently elected by the national
membership to two more four-year terms.
The
Fishers' book with Peggy's painting
The
office of Moderator, normally held by a layperson, is the
highest volunteer position in the UUA. Joe's twelve years
of service, from 1964 to 1976, were marked by painfully
divisive controversies in the denomination over the Vietnam
War and "black empowerment." In conversation,
years later, he recalled presiding at one particularly fractious
UUA General Assembly, when a young woman in hippie garb
approached him at the podium. What next? he wondered. She
placed a string of "love-beads" around his neck,
which he accepted with his broad smile. Suddenly the Assembly
burst into applause, a tribute to his fair-minded and unflappable
leadership under sorely trying circumstances. The tension
of the moment was broken; the Assembly regained its confidence
and unity.
The associations of which Joe Fisher was a member and a
leader are numerous. Some were professional: the National
Academy of Public Administration, the Commission on Physical
Sciences, Mathematics, and Resources of the National Academy
of Sciences, the American Forestry Association. Some were
ecological: The Wilderness Society, the Environmental and
Energy Study Institute, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. Some
were civic and charitable: the International Hospice Institute,
the United Way of Virginia, the Northern Virginia Community
Foundation; some were academic: Bowdoin College, in Maine;
Meadville/Lombard Theological School, a Unitarian Universalist
seminary in Chicago; and George Mason University, in Fairfax,
Virginia.
In 1985 Joe's severe back pains were diagnosed as bone cancer.
Through treatment he gained remission and relief from pain,
enabling him to maintain the extraordinary round of political,
civic, recreational, and familial activities that marked
his entire adult life.
After Joe and Peggy returned to Arlington from Richmond
in 1986, Joe was appointed Distinguished Professor of Political
Economy and special adviser to the President of George Mason
University. He taught classes and kept up a busy round of
engagements until late in 1991. Shortly before his death
the University announced the inauguration of the Joseph
L. Fisher Fellowship Endowment Fund in Public Policy, to
support students in The Institute for Public Policy. Kingsley
E. Haynes, Dean of the Graduate School, noted the qualities
that had led so many institutions to turn to him for leadership:
"Joe" Fisher embodied the best characteristics
of academic perspective and hands-on public service, both
as a participant in the legislative process and as a member
of the executive. He has a special combination of calm
and stability in very difficult situations as well as
a powerful commitment to change and adaptation. He served
as an elected and appointed official at all levels of
government and was appreciative of the critical role of
governmental personnel. He was an outstanding teacher
and a skilled adviser in both the analytical and political
arenas.
These
biographical notes may give the reader a window on the lives
from which the works in this volume grew. As Peggy notes
in the Preface, after completing his three terms as Moderator
of the UUA, she and Joe decided to develop a series of services
for their Arlington congregation and others, articulating
the "faith in action" which their lives had become.
There is no explaining how Joe and Peggy found time to write
and present this ambitious series of serviceswhile
maintaining their multiple civic and professional interests
and being the hub of a clan that includes seven adult children
and fourteen grandchildren. Suffice it to say that they
both felt impelled to teach, to inspire, to exhort, to recount
the fulfillment they had found in their "living religion."
Early in 1991 Joe's cancer returned. In spite of extensive
radiation treatments its pace accelerated.
He foresaw his death, and spoke of it with Stoic courage
and acceptance. Looking back at his life, having "fought
the good fight," he saw his personal and professional
goals fulfilled. He was surrounded by a loving family, for
whom he was deeply grateful and to whom he returned love.
He had always been the emotionally reticent New Englander,
but in the time after his cancer diagnosis, a daughter confided,
his reserve gave way to warmly open expression of feelings
between the children and their father.
In his last public address, in October, 1991, as Honorary
Co-Chair, with Peggy, of the Building Campaign of the Unitarian
Church of Arlington, Joe urged the congregation, "Go
for it!" He had given himself the same advice for a
lifetime.
His memorial service at the Unitarian church was attended
by an overflow crowd, the largest number in its history.
A few days earlier, family members and close friends gathered
at Arlington National Cemetery to offer final appreciationswords,
music, a brief dance. There his ashes were buried, next
to the graves of two four-star generals. The marker reads:
"Tech Sgt. Joseph L. Fisher, Member of Congress."
Abridged from Living Religion
by Joseph L. Fisher and Margaret W. Fisher (Arlington, VA:
Clerestory Press, 1993).
FISHER,
Joseph Lyman, a Representative
from Virginia; born in Pawtucket, Providence County,
R.I., January 11, 1914; attended public schools;
B.S., Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1935;
Ph.D., economics, Harvard University, 1947; M.A.,
education, George Washington University, Washington,
D.C., 1951; planning technician, National Resource
Planning Board, 1939-1942; economist, United States
Department of State, 1942-1943; teacher and lecturer
at various universities; served in the United
States Army, 1943-1946; senior economist, Council
of Economic Advisors, 1947-1953; president, Resources
for the Future, Inc., 1953-1974; elected as a
Democrat to the Ninety-fourth, Ninety-fifth and
Ninety-sixth Congresses (January 3, 1975-January
3, 1981); unsuccessful candidate for reelection
in 1980 to the Ninety-seventh Congress; Virginia
secretary of human resources, 1982-1986; professor
of political economy, George Mason University,
1986-1992; was a resident of Arlington, Va., until
his death there on February 19, 1992.