By a rescript of 6 February 1897,
Pope Leo XIII blessed a new statue for the restored ancient sanctuary of Our Lady of Walsingham. This was sent from Rome and placed in the Lady Chapel at the newly built
Roman Catholic parish church of
King's Lynn (the village of Walsingham was within the parish) on 19 August 1897 and on the following day the first post-Reformation pilgrimage took place to the
Slipper Chapel at Walsingham, which was purchased by Charlotte Boyd(e) in 1895 and restored for Catholic devotion. Hundreds of Catholics attended the pilgrimage and committed themselves to an annual pilgrimage (from 1897 to 1934 on
Whitsun) to commemorate this event. The
Guild of Our Lady of Ransom was instrumental in the revival of the Walsingham pilgrimage, as the Guild's leader Father Fletcher had experience in organising large-scale pilgrimages of this kind all over England and Wales. Archives are kept at King's Lynn and Walsingham. In 1900, a caretaker was placed in the Priest's House at the Slipper Chapel (said to have been built in 1338); to facilitate its use by Catholic pilgrims, under the custody of the monks at
Downside Abbey. Both Father Wrigglesworth (the Catholic parish priest of King's Lynn and Walsingham) and Father Fletcher (Founder and Master of the Guild of Ransom) laid the foundations and left others to declare the Catholic
National Shrine at the Slipper Chapel on 19 August 1934 with over 10,000 pilgrims present. Attempts to purchase the abbey site were unsuccessful (even though one of the Lee-Warners, who owned the estate, became a Catholic in 1899); however, in 1961 the site of the original Holy House within the priory ruins was excavated by members of the
Royal Archaeological Institute. procession in the grounds of the ruined abbey, May 2003 procession to Walsingham, May 2007 As a result of the initiative of the Anglican vicar of Walsingham (from 1921), Father
Alfred Hope Patten, an
Anglican Marian shrine has been established in Walsingham. First established in the parish church of
St Mary and All Saints in 1922, the image of Our Lady was translated to a purpose-built building in 1931 and pilgrimages are now held through the summer months. The
Anglican National Pilgrimage takes place on the Late Spring Bank Holiday (the last Monday in May) and is regularly met by Protestant picket lines. The
Student Cross pilgrimage on
Good Friday visits both the Anglican and Catholic shrines and the National Youth Pilgrimage is in the first week of August, also visiting
the Anglican shrine. The Catholic shrine continues to be based at the
Slipper Chapel, near the hamlet of
Houghton St Giles. Many significant occasions have been celebrated here, including the Pilgrimage of Catholic Youth (1938), the Cross Carrying Pilgrimages (since 1948), and the Crowning of Our Lady (
Marian year 1954 and 1988). On 22 May 1982, the statue of Our Lady of Walsingham was taken to
Pope John Paul II at the
Wembley Mass and given a place of honour during his British visit. In 2000, a new Feast of Our Lady of Walsingham was approved by the hierarchy, to be celebrated in England and
Wales on 24 September.
Ecumenical opportunities have been seen in Walsingham, and there is an interaction between the two shrines. In the Anglican shrine, there has long been established a small Orthodox chapel. The
Orthodox have furthered their presence at the Church of the Holy Transfiguration, formerly the Methodist chapel at Great Walsingham, and also at the former
Walsingham railway station which has been converted into the church of
St Seraphim.
Little Sisters of Jesus has had a community of sisters in Little Walsingham since the late 1960s. There is currently also a community of
Carmelites in the village. ==List of Christian sites==