Fans of The Conjuring now have the chance to buy the creepy farmhouse that served as the backdrop for the launch of the popular horror movie franchise.
The home, located in Burrillville, Rhode Island, is set to hit the auction block on Halloween. The listing from JJ Manning Auctioneers reads: "This antique farmhouse that has become famous for historical paranormal sightings and activity."
The listing continues, "In 2013, Warner Brothers released 'The Conjuring,' which was based off true paranormal events that occurred at the subject residence with the Perron Family in the 1970’s."
No starting bid has been listed yet for the farmhouse, which sits on 8.5 acres and offers just over 3,000 square feet of interior space.
The popular Conjuring franchise is based around the lives and cases of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. Lorraine worked as a clairvoyant and Ed as a demonologist—the couple would tackle various paranormal cases in their nearly 50-year career.
As for the Perron family, they moved to the farmhouse in the early 1970s. Roger and Carrolyn Perron had five daughters—Andrea, Nancy, Christine, Cindy, and April.
Reports say the family began to experience strange phenomenon almost immediately after moving into the home including foul smells, beds shaking, knocks on the walls, mysterious voices and brooms moving.
The original The Conjuring movie details the Warren's investigation and how they tied the strange happenings to the spirit of a woman named Bathsheba Sherman. Sherman allegedly practiced witchcraft in the area in the 1800s.
Though it has never been historically verified, the tale states Sherman sacrificed an infant on the farmhouse property and cursed the land before she was killed by hanging.
The Perron family continued to live on the farmhouse property for nearly a decade before they made the decision to move out.
It remains to be seen if anyone will take the risk of buying the property when it hits auction.