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St. Michael's Cathedral (Toronto)

St. Michael's Cathedral Basilica
St Michael's Cathedral from Bond and Shuter.jpg
Location 200 Church Street Garden District
Toronto, Ontario
Country Canada
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website Official website
History
Founder(s) Bishop Michael Power
Dedication Saint Michael the Archangel
Dedicated August 29, 1848
Architecture
Status Cathedral
Functional status Active
Architect(s) William Thomas
Architectural type English Gothic/Gothic Revival
Groundbreaking April 7, 1845
Specifications
Number of spires 1
Spire height 275 feet (84 m)
Administration
Archdiocese Toronto
Clergy
Archbishop Thomas Christopher Collins
Rector Rev. Michael Busch
Laity
Organist(s) William O’Meara

St. Michael's Cathedral Basilica is the cathedral church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto, Canada, and one of the oldest churches in the city. It is located at 200 Church Street in Toronto's Garden District. St. Michael's was designed by William Thomas, designer of eight other churches in the city, and was primarily financed by Irish immigrants who resided in the area. The Cathedral has a capacity of 1600.

On September 29, 2016, the feast day of Saint Michael the Archangel, the Cathedral was elevated to a Basilica.

The cathedral is home to Canada's largest English-speaking Catholic diocese. The current archbishop is Cardinal Thomas Christopher Collins, appointed by Pope Benedict XVI on 16 December 2006.

On April 7, 1845, construction began on St. Michael's Cathedral (Toronto) and the Bishop's Palace, a three story rectory adjacent to the Neo-Gothic Cathedral. Both buildings were designed by William Thomas. Townspeople dug out the foundation by hand in return for a barbecue. Shipwrights made the interior columns out of maple and oak. On May 8, 1845, Bishop Power laid the cornerstone for the Cathedral in the four-year-old diocese. Some fragments of a stone pillar from the old Norman-style York Minster Cathedral in England and some small pieces of the oak roof of that same cathedral were sealed within St. Michael's cornerstone. St. Michael's is a 19th-century interpretation of the Minster's 14th century English Gothic style. The connection with York Minster is appropriate as Toronto was known as the town of York from its settlement in 1793 until it was incorporated in 1834 and the name was changed back.

Bishop Power died on October 1, 1847, having contracted typhus while tending to his flock. His funeral was held at St. Paul’s, and he was buried in the crypt of the unfinished St. Michael’s Cathedral. Also buried in the crypt is a man who fell from the roof during construction.


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