As with many Catholic communities in Siberia, the original nucleus of the parish consisted of Poles and Lithuanians exiled to Siberia after the insurrectionary events of November 1830 in Poland.
The governor gave permission to the community of Catholics to build a church in 1843.
The first wooden chapel was built in 1848, and the community was established as a parish in 1868.
The church was closed for a campaign of atheism during Communism in 1923, and its bell tower was destroyed.
Russia's relationship with religion was normalized after the fall of the communist regime, and the church was returned to the parish in 1993.