Rev. Thomas Carroll, former Notre Dame theology student, agreed to cover the costs for the Grotto, approximately $2,500. Corby, in gratitude for the generous gift from Father Carroll, writes, “You will have made many good investments; but likely this [is] the best you ever made. With the prayers of the community and the maternal care of Mary, you, I hope will be richly rewarded in time and in eternity.”
The grotto was assembled from more than two tons of boulders from nearby farms. Built in three months, it is one-seventh the size of the shrine in France where Mary appeared to Saint Bernadette 18 times in 1858. The Grotto was dedicated on August 5, 1896, the Feast of Our Lady of Snows, by celebration of Holy Mass followed by an ornate procession of 500 priests, brothers, and nuns.
In his commencement address in 2013, Cardinal Timothy Dolan perfectly expresses the meaning of the grotto and importance of Marian devotion for the student body: “At this grotto there’s a touch of the transcendent, a hint of the beyond, a whisper of the sacred, that reminds us that we’re not just minds and bodies, but hearts and immortal souls, [called to] an adventure in fidelity that beckons us to cast out to the deep […] She’d remind us that He has a plan for us, that these years of college have been a part of it, and that we’re happiest when our plans are consonant with His.”