Church building

Saint-Germain Cathedral

Canada Rimouski part of a Quebec heritage property
Saint-Germain Cathedral
Saint-Germain Cathedral · Wikipedia

About

St. Germain Cathedral is a Roman Catholic cathedral located in Rimouski (Québec). It is the mother church for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rimouski.

Saint-Germain Cathedral

The church was raised to the status of cathedral on 15 January 1867 by Jean Langevin, first bishop of Rimouski, and was consecrated on 28 May 1853.

Saint-Germain Cathedral

The cathedral was spared from the nuit rouge ("Red Night") on 6 May 1950, when nearly half of the town was burnt down by a fire that started at the Price Brothers Company sawmill. Legend has it [ citation needed ] that a priest sprinkled holy water around the city's cathedral and that the fire would not cross the line.

The exterior of the cathedral is of neo-Gothic influence with pointed arch windows decorated with stained glass, buttress and pinnacles while the interior is influenced by the Gothic style with its ceiling that looks like a diagonal rib vault. Grey stones were used to build the outside. The main vault is 28 m (90 ft) high and the interior one is 18 m (60 ft) high. Three bells, weighing 1,641 kg in total were installed in 1891. The cathedral is famous for its Casavant Frères organ.

Saint-Germain Cathedral

Joseph J.B. Verret (architect) designed the Bishop's Palace (1901-01) for Monseigneur A.A. Blais, of St. Germain Roman Catholic Cathedral.