That's an older Fisher that appears to be in good condition. Joshua Kavett of the Fisher Museum just released his book detailing the history of Fisher Norris...very interesting read. I'm going off memory, but I think they stopped casting the name into the foot in the 1890s, and shortly after that they added lugs to the feet.
I've owned over 100 anvils and probably 10 Fishers (have three now) and like them quite a bit. The nice thing is that they're quiet so you won't hurt your ears, or bother any neighbors. My medium size anvil is a 200lb Fisher and it's really nice to work on.
The only new anvils made today that are in the same quality ballpark, or better, are Refflinghaus (have two of those), Peddinghaus (had a couple) and Holland. A step below would be Fontanini and Nimba. Anything in that size range and quality is going to be $6/lb or more. A 390lb Holland is $2,400. A 460lb Refflinghaus is $3650, and that's the cheaper of the two versions...oh, and a wait list to get one that has no known timeframe. A 460lb Fontanini is $2,757. A 450lb Nimba is $2575. You can't get a new Ridgid Peddinhaus that large, but their 275lb anvil goes for $2130. All of the other names you commonly see are ductile iron and quite soft...like Rockwell 45-48, which is softer than a good hammer. I personally can't stand soft anvils...but they're better than a rock.
Junk anvils are selling for $3/lb in most parts of the country, and many places are higher. Some of the problem is just normal demand...people see prices jumping and think "I've always wanted an anvil, I better get one now"....almost none of those folks are actually doing blacksmithing on hot metal, and they'd be better off with something you can cold hammer on without fear of damage.