John Edward Cassidy

John Edward Cassidy, Jr. (January 31, 1896 March 25, 1984) was an American lawyer.

Born in Ottawa, Illinois, Cassidy received his law degree from the University of Notre Dame and in 1917 and was admitted to the Illinois bar also in 1917. Cassidy served in the United States Army in Europe during World War I. In 1920, Cassidy moved to Peoria, Illinois to head the legal department of Aetna Life Insurance Company. In 1921, he set up his own law firm in Peoria. Cassidy was involved with the Democratic Party. Cassidy was appointed Illinois Attorney General in 1938 and served until 1941. In 1947, Illinois Governor Dwight Green appointed Cassidy to be chairman of a citizens committee to investigate the March 25, 1947 mine disaster in Centralia, Illinois. Cassidy died in a hospital in Peoria, Illinois.[1][2]

Notes

  1. 'Illinois Blue Book 1939-1940,' Biographical Sketch of John E. Cassidy, pg. 53
  2. 'Former Illinois attorney general Cassidy dies, 88,' Mount Carmel Daily Republican Register (Illinois), March 27, 1984, pg. 7
Legal offices
Preceded by
Otto Kerner, Sr.
Attorney General of Illinois
1938 1941
Succeeded by
George F. Barrett


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