Featured Post

The Ghostly Gazette- 📰 Why Children Are Often Linked to Paranormal Experiences

Few themes appear more often in paranormal reports than the presence of children. Across generations, cultures, and belief...

The Haunting of Annabelle, The Doll

Annabelle, The Doll – Fairfield County, Monroe, Connecticut



Tucked away in a locked glass case in a hidden room once belonging to famed paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren, sits a doll so infamous, so feared, it’s said to be one of the most dangerously haunted objects in the world.

Her name is Annabelle — and contrary to what horror movies have shown, she is not porcelain. She is a floppy, soft-bodied Raggedy Ann doll — red yarn hair, wide stitched smile, innocent button eyes. And yet, it is precisely that contrast — the childlike innocence hiding what lies beneath — that makes her story so deeply unsettling.

Annabelle’s haunting began in the early 1970s, when two young women, Donna and Angie, shared a modest apartment while Donna was in nursing school. One day, Donna’s mother purchased the vintage Raggedy Ann doll from a hobby store and gifted it to her daughter. It was meant to be a cheerful presence, a nostalgic reminder of childhood.

But within days, things began to change.

Subtle Movements and Something Unseen

At first, it was small. The doll would be found in slightly different positions than where Donna had left her. Arms crossed, legs uncrossed, head turned. Then she began moving rooms entirely — from the couch to Donna’s bed, from the bedroom to the hallway. Notes started appearing on parchment paper that the girls didn’t own — small scraps written in a childlike hand that read “Help Us” or “Help Lou.”

Then came the red smears — appearing on the doll’s hands and chest as though she had touched something wet… or wounded.

Feeling unsettled, Donna reached out to a medium. During a séance, the spirit identified itself as a young girl named Annabelle Higgins, who had died tragically on the property years earlier. She claimed to be lonely. Lost. She said she liked Donna and Angie, and only wanted to stay near them.

Moved by the story, the girls agreed to let her spirit remain in the doll.

But they had made a terrible mistake.

The Attacks Begin

Lou, a friend of the girls, never trusted the doll. He warned Donna repeatedly that something was wrong. One night, Lou awoke in a cold sweat, unable to move, and saw the doll staring at him — hovering at the foot of his bed.

Then came the most terrifying moment. Lou entered the apartment one afternoon to find it empty and eerily silent. As he approached the doll, he felt a presence behind him. Spinning around, he found nothing — but then felt a searing pain across his chest. When he lifted his shirt, he discovered seven claw marks, three vertical and four horizontal, as though an invisible animal had torn into his flesh.

The scratches burned but healed unusually fast. Still, the message was clear: Annabelle was not an innocent spirit.

Enter the Warrens

Terrified, the girls finally contacted Ed and Lorraine Warren, the famous paranormal investigators known for their work on the Amityville case and dozens of other hauntings. After interviewing the girls and witnessing the phenomena for themselves, the Warrens concluded that the spirit inhabiting the doll was not a young girl at all — but a malevolent, demonic entity using the name “Annabelle” as a ruse to gain trust.

According to Ed Warren, the spirit was never human. It was inhuman — a demon seeking possession of a human host. The doll was simply a conduit. The invitation had been made during the séance, and the entity had been growing in strength ever since.

They performed a blessing on the apartment, but even transporting the doll back to their museum in Monroe proved harrowing. Ed reported that the car’s brakes failed repeatedly during the drive — only after sprinkling holy water on the doll did the malfunctions stop.

The Museum Warning

Once safely in their Occult Museum, the doll was placed inside a locked glass case with a sign reading:

“Warning: Positively Do Not Open.”

The case was blessed regularly by a priest. Yet even inside the museum, Annabelle’s energy remained active.

Visitors who mocked or challenged the doll were said to suffer tragic consequences. One young man allegedly taunted the doll, banging on the glass. He died in a motorcycle crash later that very day. Another visitor claimed to see the doll’s head turn slightly when no one else was looking.

Lorraine Warren, until her passing, claimed she would never look directly into the doll’s eyes.

What Remains Today

The Warren Occult Museum is no longer open to the public, but Annabelle remains locked inside — watched, contained, but not necessarily dormant.

Paranormal researchers often say that objects can hold energy, but in Annabelle’s case, it’s something more. She’s not a haunted doll. She’s a lure. A Trojan horse of innocence that conceals a darkness far more ancient than most can comprehend.

So if you ever see a Raggedy Ann doll in a thrift store, sitting upright when it shouldn't be…

Look twice.
And never say yes when something asks, “Can I stay?”


Address:
Warren Occult Museum (now closed)
30 Knollwood Street
Monroe, Connecticut 06468
Phone: N/A (museum closed to public)
The museum is no longer open to visitors. Do not attempt to access the location.
Annabelle remains secured and regularly blessed by clergy and Warren Foundation staff.

Spookfest: 1692-1693 Salem Witch Trials- Part 1



Where the Witch Hunt Began

Seasonal Spookfest: Once each season, we dive into a chilling theme from America’s haunted past. This fall, we begin in Salem — where fear turned neighbor against neighbor, and ghost stories were born from truth.

They say it started with two girls — a nine-year-old named Betty Parris and her eleven-year-old cousin, Abigail Williams.

They lived in a small Puritan household in Salem Village, surrounded by rigid rules, scripture, and the constant reminder that the Devil was always near.

In early 1692, they began to change. They screamed. They convulsed. They hid under tables and cried out at invisible hands. They barked like dogs and shook as if possessed.

The town was terrified.

Ministers were called. Fasting and prayer were ordered. But the fits continued.

And in a world that saw Satan as not just real, but active and walking among them, there was only one explanation:

Witchcraft.

When the girls were finally pressed — “Who is doing this to you?” — they named three women.

Tituba. Sarah Good. Sarah Osborne.

Three women who had no power, no wealth, and no way to defend themselves.

Tituba was an enslaved woman from the West Indies, living in the home of Reverend Parris. She was different. Foreign. Easy to blame.

Sarah Good was a poor, homeless woman who walked the streets and muttered to herself. People crossed the road to avoid her.

And Sarah Osborne had married a servant, stopped attending church, and challenged inheritance laws — in other words, she broke the mold.

That was all it took.

The accusations spread like fire on dry wood. More girls began having fits. More women — and soon, men — were accused. Neighbors turned on each other. Old grudges found new life.

What started as fear became frenzy.

By the time the panic burned out in 1693, nineteen people had been hanged. One man — Giles Corey — was crushed to death under stones. Over 200 others had been accused. Dozens languished in jail, some dying before they ever faced a judge.

None of them were witches.

They were farmers. Mothers. Ministers. Children. Midwives. Healers.

People whose only real crime was being poor, or outspoken, or inconvenient.

The town of Salem has since apologized. Pardons were issued — slowly, some not until centuries later.

But the damage was done. The stain remains.

And even now, Salem leans into the legend. Ghost tours. Witch museums. Souvenir shops. Tourism thrives on tragedy.

But the truth of where it began is not about magic or mystery.

It began with fear. With superstition. With unchecked power and a hunger for control.

It began with the decision to listen to fear instead of reason.

It began with a single word — witch — spoken loud enough to silence the truth.

And in that silence… people died.


🕯️ Coming Next Week on SpookFest…

We're taking you deeper into the shadows of Salem — where fear ruled the streets and accusations lit the flames of hysteria. Join us as we uncover the haunted echoes of the Salem Witch Trials and the lingering spirits that still whisper in the alleys of Massachusetts.

From historic hangings to eerie encounters in the old jailhouse, next week’s SpookFest is packed with bone-chilling tales, historical hauntings, and a few witchy secrets the textbooks left behind.

👻 Stay tuned… the spirits of Salem are ready to speak.

📰 The Ghostly Gazette – Paranormal in the News- Paranormal Investigator Dies Touring with Annabelle

A seasoned paranormal investigator has died under mysterious circumstances while touring with the infamous Annabelle doll — the alleged cursed object kept under lock and key by the late Ed and Lorraine Warren. The tragedy unfolded in the haunted streets of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — a town known for its spectral soldiers, battlefield phantoms, and now, a dark new chapter.

The investigator was part of a traveling tour with the Warren Legacy Foundation, showcasing allegedly haunted artifacts, including the real Annabelle — a Raggedy Ann doll said to be possessed by a malevolent spirit. Eyewitnesses reported the man felt ill shortly after speaking to the crowd about his past experiences, including a disturbing encounter with the doll during a previous investigation.

He collapsed later that night in his hotel room and was pronounced dead at the scene. No foul play is suspected, but online speculation has exploded — with many asking: Did Annabelle claim another soul?

The Foundation issued a heartfelt statement mourning his passing and emphasized their dedication to handling the artifacts with respect and ritual safeguards. Still, this marks the second eerie incident tied to Annabelle in recent months.

Paranormal forums are buzzing, and believers are sounding the alarms: Is the haunted highway becoming real? As eerie coincidences mount, some are calling for the doll to be returned to permanent containment.

“These items aren’t toys or museum pieces,” one Foundation member said. “They carry energy — and sometimes, consequences.”