in
King's Lynn to the Chapel of Saint Catherine of Alexandria (Slipper Chapel) in Houghton Saint Giles When the Chapel of Saint Catherine of Alexandria (Slipper Chapel) was built, Walsingham was second only to
Canterbury in importance as an English pilgrimage site, attracting pilgrims from across the country and beyond. In 1538, following
King Henry VIII's
English Reformation, the chapel fell into disuse and was repurposed over the centuries as a
poorhouse, a
forge, a cowshed, and a
barn. In 1863, Charlotte Pearson Boyd (1837–1906), a wealthy local woman and convert to
Catholicism from
Anglicanism, identified the chapel. She purchased the building from the farm owner in 1896, restored it, and then donated the chapel to
Downside Abbey for Catholic devotion. The chapel underwent further restoration in 1904 under the direction of architect
Thomas Garner. On 6 February 1897, the
Our Lady of the Annunciation Church in
King's Lynn was re-established as the Pontifical Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, authorising the image for public veneration by
papal rescript from
Pope Leo XIII. In 1934, the image was subsequently translated to the Chapel of Saint Catherine of Alexandria (Slipper Chapel) in Houghton Saint Giles, near Walsingham. On the
Feast of the Assumption, 15 August 1934, Bishop
Laurence Youens of Northampton celebrated the first public
Mass in the Slipper Chapel in four hundred years. Two days later, Cardinal
Francis Bourne led a National Pilgrimage of the Catholic Bishops of
England and Wales, along with more than 10,000 people, to the shrine. From that date, it became the Catholic
National Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham. ==Holy mile==