A room in the home of the Cassidy family at 221 Hancock
Street (no longer standing) was used for Catholic Mass in
Sandusky, Ohio, before Catholic churches were built in the city.
Edward
and Robert Cassidy were immigrants to the United States, having been born in
Ireland. The Ohio Historic Places Dictionary states that Robert Cassidy built Holy Angels Church in Sandusky between 1841 and 1845. In the 1855 Sandusky City Directory, both Cassidy men listed
their occupation as mason. Edward Cassidy and his wife Bridget had a total of
twelve children. An early plat map from the Erie County Auditor shows the exact location of the Edward
Cassidy home, though by the time of this map’s publication, it may have been Edward
Cassidy, the son of Edward and Bridget Cassidy who resided here. The house sat
on the west side on Hancock Street between Market Street and Washington Street,
in Sandusky’s Second Ward.
It is believed that this is the room in
which the early Catholic church services were held when they met at the Cassidy
home.
Ernst Niebergall this picture of a dresser in the Cassidy
home in the 1920s, though its use as an altar for church services took place in
the 1840s.
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