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Chapelle du Voeu à Tourcoing dans le Nord

Nord

Chapelle du Voeu

    18 Rue Faidherbe
    59200 Tourcoing
Crédit photo : VVVCFFrance - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
30 juin 1916
Wish of the Catholics of Tourcoing
1920
Start of work
17 octobre 1922
Consecration of the altar
10 décembre 2019
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

La Chapelle du Voeu, in total, 22 rue Faidherbe, on Parcel No. 76, appearing in the cadastre section HO : inscription by order of 10 December 2019

Key figures

Abbé Leclercq - Wish Coordinator Deported to Germany after the wish of 1916.
Jean-Baptiste Maillard - Architect Co-author of the plans with his brother Henri.
Henri Maillard - Architect Brother of Jean-Baptiste, co-conceptor of the chapel.
Jules Clamagirand - Sculptor Author of the tympanum bas-relief representing the vow.

Origin and history

The Chapel of the Veu comes from an act of collective faith during the First World War. On June 30, 1916, the Catholics of Tourcoing, occupied by the Germans, made the solemn vow to raise a chapel if the Sacred Heart spared the city of bombing, fire and ruin. This vow was coordinated by Abbé Leclercq, who was deported to Germany shortly afterwards. The promise combines a religious community dedicated to perpetual worship, symbolizing the recognition of the population.

After the Armistice, the project took shape thanks to the purchase of a private hotel adjacent to the land chosen by the Benedictines of the Blessed Sacrament. The plans are entrusted to the French architects Jean-Baptiste and Henri Maillard, renowned for their prolific style. A subscription from 300 donors finances construction, started in 1920. Twenty-seven nuns settled there in 1921, and the altar was consecrated on 17 October 1922. The chapel, integrated with the urban alignment, is distinguished by its brick and stone facade, decorated with allegorical sculptures.

The building is characterized by a unique spatial organization: a nave for the faithful and a choir closed for the nuns, each illuminated by a zenithal glass and surmounted by a platform of adoration. The interior decor, opulent but balanced, includes vegetal friezes, carved angels and symbolic motifs such as the arms of Tourcoing. The tympanum, the work of sculptor Jules Clamagirand, represents the wish of 1916 with a hairy, angels and the Blessed Sacrament. Classified as a Historic Monument in 2019, the chapel embodies both a spiritual heritage and a discreet architectural success.

The outer discretion of the chapel, with its brick sprocket and its polychromy plays, contrasts with the richness of its interior. The choice of materials (brick, two types of stone) and the composition in depth create a harmony between urban integration and sacred destination. The inscription above the gate explicitly recalls the origin of the monument: This chapel was erected in fulfilment of the vow made [...] under German occupation on 30 June 1916.

Today, the Chapel of the Veu shows the resilience of a community in times of war and the ingenuity of local artisans. Its classification protects a historical, artistic and memorial heritage, where devotion, architecture and urban history combine.

External links