The National Shrine of Our Lady of the Highway, of which our parish is justifiably proud, owes its origin to Father Giles Lawlor, OFM. The incident which was responsible for the conception of the Shrine however, is a tragic one. On Sunday, June 28, 1936, Father John Joseph McLaughlin, a recently ordained priest from St. Francis Church in New York, assisted Father Giles with the morning Masses. That evening the two priests set out for St. Joseph's Seminary in Callicoon, New York, to begin their annual retreat. On the way their car was struck by another car. Father John Joseph was killed instantly; Father Giles, however, escaped serious injury. Father Giles was convinced that he owed his life to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin.
Permission was granted several times for Father Giles to celebrate Mass at the outdoor shrine. In 1954 the present church was built on the site of the original shrine and so a new shrine was erected at the base of the bell tower. The old and the new can be seen below.
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Our Lady of the Highway Shrine prior to the construction of the new church in 1954. |
The shrine as it stands today. |