St. John's Shrewsbury Anglican Church in Gore, Quebec, is a small rural church dating to the 19th century that has been the subject of local ghost stories for generations. The church, situated in the rolling farmland of the Laurentian foothills, is said to be haunted by a former parishioner or clergyman whose identity has been lost to time. Visitors and church members have reported hearing organ music playing softly when the church is empty and locked, the sound of hymn-singing that seems to come from inside the building during off-hours, and the sensation of a benevolent presence during prayer. Some have described seeing a dark-clothed figure kneeling in one of the pews, who disappears when the lights are switched on. The churchyard, with its old headstones leaning at angles amid overgrown grass, adds to the atmospheric quality of the location. The region around Gore, in the southern Laurentians, was settled primarily by English-speaking communities in the 19th century, and the small Anglican churches they built remain as testament to their presence in a predominantly Francophone province. The ghost of St. John's Shrewsbury may represent the spiritual legacy of a community that has largely moved on.
