Frederick Bohn Fisher (14 February 1882 – 15 April 1938) was an American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1920.
He was of English ancestry, the son of James Edward and Josephine (née Shirey) Fisher.
Fisher then became the Eastern Field Secretary for the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church (1911–1912).
He was then appointed the General Secretary of the Laymen's Missionary Movement of his denomination (1913–1915), then the Associate General Secretary of the Laymen's Missionary Movement in the U.S. and Canada (beginning in 1916), transferring his conference membership back to the North Indiana Conference in 1913.
In his official capacities, he organized conventions of Methodist Men in Indianapolis (1913), Boston (1914), and Columbus, Ohio (1915).
He resigned the Episcopacy in 1930 and returned to the U.S. to become pastor of First United Methodist Church, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Dr. Fisher designed a new recessed chancel including the new pulpit, reredos, mural of the apostles and had the ceiling painted with religious symbols from all over the world.