Construction This Catholic church began in 1852 as a small wooden "shanty" church, built with $300 collected from railroad workers. The noted
Franciscan missionary,
Rev. Pamphilius DiMagliano,
OSF, replaced that church with a more formal building costing $10,000 in 1860. Father DiMagliano dedicated the church to the patroness of the mother-church of the Franciscan Order at
Assisi,
St. Mary of the Angels. Construction of the current Gothic Revival church started in 1913 under the supervision of French-trained architect Emile Ulrich of Cleveland. The
Bishop of Buffalo Charles H. Colton laid the cornerstone of the church in November 1913. Completed in 1917 at a total cost of $250,000 (equivalent to $ million in ), the most prominent feature was the twin 150-foot towers capped with stone steeples built almost exclusively of white marble from nearby
Pennsylvania. The church was formally opened and blessed by
Venerable Monsignor Nelson Baker on September 26, 1915.
Restorations In the centennial year of 1952, the entire church interior was redecorated, adding religious images and medallions painted on canvas in New York that was then applied to the walls of the church. Angels on clouds carry banners with the words to the Hail Mary prayer in Latin. "
Ora pro nobis peccatoribus, Nunc et in hora mortis nostrae" (Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death). The altars, railing, pulpit, and baptismal font are crafted from
Carrara marble from
Italy.
Papal decree On Feb. 14, 2017,
Pope Francis granted the title of Minor Basilica to St. Mary of the Angels in Olean, making it the 83rd basilica in the United States, ==Notable associations==