

Introduction
John Cassidy (1860–1939) was an Irish sculptor and painter who worked in Manchester, England, and created many public sculptures.
Life
Cassidy was born in Littlewood Commons, Slane, County Meath, Ireland, on 1 January 1860. He moved to Dublin at the age of 20 to find work. There he attended art classes at night and won a scholarship to study in Milan, Italy. After two years he moved to Manchester, England, where he lived for the rest of his life. He studied at the Manchester School of Art in 1883 and taught there in 1887.
He created many public sculptures, especially war memorials, and exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Royal Hibernian Academy and in Manchester City Art Gallery. He was for a time assisted in his studios by John Ashton Floyd, a local sculptor.For most of his career, his studio was at Lincoln Grove in Chorlton-on-Medlock.
Many of his works are in the Manchester district, notably those in the John Rylands Library, Deansgate: a group of three figures representing Theology Inspiring Science and Art (1898), and statues in white marble of the library's founder Enriqueta Rylands (1907) and her husband John Rylands (c.1900).
Cassidy died at St Joseph's Hospital in Whalley Range on 19 July 1939 and was buried in Southern Cemetery.