None of it stands up. The church would be doing miracles all along if they were still in place. A few fringe groups pretend to have them but none of that stands up either.
Many miracles are attributed to St. Patrick like healing the sick and raising various dead people. There are two documents he wrote that historians accept as genuine. One is the Confessio or Declaration. In it, he tells of a vision that led him to leave slavery in Ireland and hearing a voice that led him to return. There is a story of the gates of the city that housed the king of the Picts opening supernaturally for St. Columbo after the king shut them to lock him out from preaching the gospel. If you read about Scotland's early Reformation period, George Wishart, who John Knox travelled with as a body guard of sorts, is said to have prophesied the death of the cardinal who put him to death, along with other supernatural activities. During the time of the Covenanters, you can of Alexander Peden, known as prophet Peden, predicting that John Brown would soon die and knowing it happened though he was miles away and of an Irish nobleman being raised from the dead after Peden prayed next to the body for it for hours.
There are numerous miracles attributed to others as well. For example, resurrections and healings to St. Francis of Assissi. Going much further back, there are miracles attributed to St. Martin of Tours such as raising three people from the dead and converted thousands of pagans. A friend and disciple of Martin recorded many of the miracles he performed.
But it seems like your position is that if you haven't seen them, they haven't happened, as if God had to pass everything by you for it to be real.