Sneha Girap (Editor)

Woolf Fisher

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Spouse(s)
  
Joyce Paykel

Name
  
Woolf Fisher

Parents
  
Fanny Dabscheck




Born
  
20 May 1912
Wellington, New Zealand

Occupation
  
Businessman, Racehorse owner/breeder, Philanthropist

Board member of
  
Fisher & Paykel, New Zealand Steel Ltd., Auckland Racing Club, New Zealand Insurance Co.

Died
  
January 12, 1975, Rotorua, New Zealand

Education
  
Mount Albert Grammar School

Sir Woolf Fisher - NZ Racing Hall of Fame inductee


Sir Woolf Fisher (20 May 1912 – 12 January 1975) was a New Zealand businessman and philanthropist who co-founded Fisher & Paykel, a major appliance manufacturing company, and the Ra Ora Stud, an important Thoroughbred racehorse breeding operation.

Contents

Woolf Fisher Congratulations to 2014 Woolf Fisher Scholars

Born in Wellington, his family moved to Auckland where he studied at Mount Albert Grammar School. Woolf is the oldest brother of renowned fashion entrepreneur and philanthropist, Gus Fisher. A salesman turned businessman, Fisher was involved in a number of successful New Zealand enterprises. He served as the first chairman of New Zealand Steel Ltd.

Woolf Fisher wwwoutwardboundconzwpcontentuploads201312

In 1960, he established the Woolf Fisher Trust to provide funding that maintained the salaries of post-primary schoolteachers and principals while sending them overseas to further their education. Fisher also supported the Outward Bound Trust of New Zealand and in 1961 became its first president.

Woolf Fisher Macleans College Woolf Fisher Fellowship to Dr Lal

In the 1964 New Year Honours Fisher was appointed a Knight Bachelor for public services, particularly in connection with the development of industry. He died in 1975 while at his vacation home on the lake at Rotorua. Following its formation, in 1994 Woolf Fisher was inducted in the New Zealand Business Hall of Fame.[1]

Woolf Fisher Woolf Fisher Trust To recognize and reward excellence in

Thoroughbred racing

A polo enthusiast who was responsible for the revival of the Auckland Polo Club in 1955, Fisher became a major figure in the sport of Thoroughbred racing. In 1950 he established Ra Ora Stud at Mount Wellington whose success led to new facilities being constructed in 1962 on 71.6 hectares at East Tamaki, just out of Auckland. The breeding farm stood important stallions such as Sovereign Edition (Ire), Soviet Star (USA), Nassipour (USA), Desert Sun (GB), and Marju (USA), among others. Ra Ora Stud continued in operation after Fisher's death in 1975. Run by a Board of Trustees for his estate [2], it closed in 2001 and its bloodstock sold at auction.[3] [4]

Fisher served on the Board of Directors of the Auckland Racing Club for 17 years, with two years as its president.

References

Woolf Fisher Wikipedia