"Where a frozen river and a statue that opened its eyes gave Canada its national Marian shrine"
Basilica of Notre-Dame-du-Cap, Trois-Rivières, Quebec
Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada
On the banks of the St. Lawrence River, in Quebec's Trois-Rivieres, a tiny stone chapel from 1714 and a monumental octagonal basilica from 1964 stand side by side. Together they hold three centuries of rosary devotion, two reported miracles, and the only canonically crowned Madonna in Canada. Over half a million pilgrims come each year to pray before the statue that three witnesses described as opening its eyes on a June evening in 1888.
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Quick Facts
Location
Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada
Tradition
Site Type
Year Built
1964
Coordinates
46.3686, -72.4982
Last Updated
Feb 11, 2026
Learn More
Notre-Dame-du-Cap grew from a modest New France parish into one of North America's most important Marian shrines through three centuries of devotion, two reported miracles, and the institutional stewardship of the Missionary Oblates.
Origin Story
The story begins with a pig. In the mid-19th century, Father Luc Desilets found a pig chewing a rosary inside his parish church at Cap-de-la-Madeleine. The sight moved him to vow himself to the Blessed Virgin and revive the Marian devotion that Father Paul Vachon had planted in 1694. When his growing congregation needed a larger church, Desilets planned to use stones from across the St. Lawrence, but the river refused to freeze during the mild winter of 1878-1879. He vowed that if the stones could be transported, he would preserve the old chapel as a shrine to Mary. In March 1879, ice floes from upstream formed a solid bridge across the river. It held for exactly one week, from the Feast of St. Joseph to the Feast of the Annunciation. Parishioners hauled stones across on horse-drawn sleds. Desilets kept his promise. Nine years later, on the evening the chapel was formally dedicated as a Marian shrine, Desilets, Franciscan friar Frederic Janssoone, and Pierre Lacroix saw the statue of the Virgin open her eyes. The event lasted five to ten minutes. Bishop Cloutier of Trois-Rivieres later recognized its supernatural character. From that evening forward, Notre-Dame-du-Cap was a pilgrimage site.
Key Figures
Father Paul Vachon
First resident pastor who established the Confraternity of the Most Holy Rosary in 1694, planting the seed of Marian devotion at Cap-de-la-Madeleine
Father Luc Desilets
Parish priest who revived Marian devotion from 1867, made the vow that preserved the old chapel, and was one of three witnesses to the prodigy of the eyes in 1888
Blessed Frederic Janssoone, OFM
Franciscan friar known as 'God's Pedlar' who witnessed the prodigy of the eyes and developed the pilgrimage. Beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1988, exactly 100 years after the miracle
Pierre Lacroix
Handicapped man from Trois-Rivieres, third witness to the prodigy of the eyes on June 22, 1888
Bishop Francois-Xavier Cloutier
Bishop of Trois-Rivieres who recognized the supernatural character of the prodigy of the eyes and carried out the canonical coronation of the statue in 1904
Adrien Dufresne
Quebec architect (1904-1983) who designed the modern octagonal basilica
Father Jan Tillemans, OMI
Dutch Oblate (1915-1980) who created the basilica's stained glass windows, considered an unequalled treasure in North America
Spiritual Lineage
Marian devotion at Cap-de-la-Madeleine dates to 1694 and the Confraternity of the Most Holy Rosary. The shrine was formally inaugurated in 1888. The Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate have served as guardians since 1902, transforming a parish shrine into a national pilgrimage destination. The shrine forms part of Quebec's trinity of great pilgrimage sites alongside Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre (founded 1658) and the Oratoire Saint-Joseph (founded 1904). It is one of six Canadian national shrines recognized by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.
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