Ed and Lorraine Warren were a married couple of demologists. People who were possessed or experiencing inexplicable phenomena reported to them. One of the cases interested director James Wan to create. The house where the Perron family experienced terrifying events years ago still exists today. The property has recently been handed over to a new owner.
Movie plot. “Presence” is inspired by real events
reveals one of the most terrifying cases the Warrens have faced. The demologists are invited to the Perron family’s home. In an estate located on a remote farm, members of a family experience inexplicable phenomena. It soon turns out that the culprit is a powerful demon. An experienced married couple fights against a being that disturbs the peace of the residents.
The scary house is real. What was happening at the estate?
Although the house where The Conjuring takes place is not the real home of the Perron family, the property where they experienced paranormal phenomena is real. The building is located in Rhode Island in the small American town of Harrisville.
Between 1971 and 1980, Carolyn and Roger Perron moved into the 18th-century house with their five daughters. The whole family experienced many possessions and chilling experiences on the estate. — During the séance, Miss Perron saw her mother levitate and then throw her 20 feet. She says she hit her head so hard she thought she was killed – “The Wall Street Journal” experiences of Andrea, the oldest of the girls. According to the Warrens, whom Carolyn approached for help, the house was inhabited by several ghosts, but one of them was particularly dangerous. It was a demon, Bathsheby Sherman, who had hanged herself behind the barn on the property years ago. The apparition was jealous of the status of the lady of the house, so her victims were mainly Mrs. Perron.
In 2019, the property was acquired by paranormal investigators Jennifer and Corry Heinze. After the move, the couple willingly reported in the media what they experienced at home. In an interview with the Washington Post, they confessed what their first weeks after moving looked like. For the first four months, the whole family occupied one room. “Besides being afraid, it was a sign of respect for the spirits. We let them get used to us instead of breaking in — . The family willingly invited guests to the house, making it a tourist attraction. “I don’t feel like there’s anything wrong with it, but you can tell there’s a lot going on,” Corry told the Sun Journal.
When in 2022 the Heinze couple decided to sell the property, they used the terrifying story for advertising. The haunted house eventually sold for $1.5 million.
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Source: Gazeta

Tristin is an accomplished author and journalist, known for his in-depth and engaging writing on sports. He currently works as a writer at 247 News Agency, where he has established himself as a respected voice in the sports industry.