Christ the King Cathedral, Gaspé


Christ the King Cathedral is a religious building in the city of Gaspé, Quebec in eastern Canada. Located on rue de la Cathédrale, adjacent to the Saint-Rosaire Gaspé Elementary School, it is the only wooden cathedral in North America.

History

The first two places of worship erected in Gaspé to meet the needs of the Catholic population were simple chapels; the first was built around 1825 and the second in 1860.
During creation of the Diocese of Gaspé by Pope Pius XI on May 5, 1922, the parish church of St. Albert was promoted to the status of cathedral. The appointment of the first bishop of the diocese, Bishop François-Xavier Ross, was held in December 1922, but he could not reach Gaspé to take charge and organize the diocese until February 1923. The first cathedral was destroyed by a fire in March 1929.
It was not until the mid-1960s that Bishop Jean-Marie Fortier commissioned the architect Gérard Notebaert to design a new temple of the Diocese of Gaspé. Gilles Ouellet Bishop consecrated the new cathedral in 1969.
On January 25, 2001, the Cathedral of Christ the King was recognized as a historic monument by the Ministry of Culture and Communications of Quebec.