
MY HAUNTED MUSEUM
MY JOURNEY INTO COLLECTING "HAUNTED" AND "OCCULT" OBJECTS BEGAN MANY YEARS AGO WITH A DEEP FASCINATION FOR THE MYSTERIOUS AND SUPERNATURAL. IT ALL STARTED WITH A FEW WWII ARTIFACTS THAT I CAME ACROSS AT LESLIE'S FAMILY TREE RESTAURANT. OVER THE YEARS, MY COLLECTION HAS GROWN TO INCLUDE AN ARRAY OF CHILLING AND INTRIGUING ITEMS SUCH AS: A GENUINE HUMAN SKULL, THE ASHES OF A HUSBAND AND WIFE, A 1920'S HAND HARP ONCE OWNED BY A MURDER VICTIM, AN AUTHENTIC BRICK FROM THE HISTORIC BARON WOOLEN MILL, A PLATE SIZED BOULDER FROM SKINWALKER RANCH AND MUCH MORE
I'VE CONDUCTED INVESTIGATIONS OF THE ARTIFACTS, CAPTURING COMPELLING EVIDENCE OF PARANORMAL INTERACTIONS
🕯️ Haunted Museum Postcards 🕯️
Each postcard is a real, physical artifact prepared by me from my personal Haunted Museum. Every piece is hand-signed, uniquely numbered, and marked with a fingerprint impression to symbolize human contact and energy. No two are alike, and once they’re gone, they won’t be recreated. If you want to own a genuine piece of the Haunted Museum, this is your chance!
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Human Skull (Former Medical Specimen)
Real Human Skull belonging to an unknown woman, whom in the 1950s, upon passing, donated her skull as a medical specimen until it was acquired by a collector where it sat until 2021 when I got it. STRANGE occurrences have happen upon its arrival to the collection.
Bobby Mackey's Signed "Johanna CD"
An autographed "Single" of the song "Johanna" by Bobby Mackey himself. Johanna, one of the legendary purported spirits said to haunt Bobby Mackey’s Music World, a famed honky‑tonk in Wilder, Kentucky that was recently torn down and remains can be seen at "Zak Bagan's The Haunted Museum"
Thanksgiving 2023 Screen Used
Lizzie is a diner employee in Thanksgiving (2023), a character whose ordinary routine is briefly highlighted before the film descends into violence. In a key diner scene, she is shown taking orders by hand, grounding the story in small-town normalcy. This screen-used order form, held by Lizzie during that moment, represents the calm before the carnage and serves as an authentic production artifact from the film, now preserved as part of the Haunted Museum collection.
Bobby Mackeys Artifacts
Bobby Mackey’s Music World is widely known in paranormal lore for legends of a “portal to hell” said to exist beneath the building. This exhibit contains a small portion of dirt collected from the area associated with that legend, symbolizing one of the most infamous claims in American hauntings. Also displayed here are two of only ten preserved flooring pieces recovered from Bobby Mackey’s during its demolition.. rare, tangible remnants of a location long considered one of the most haunted buildings in the world, now permanently housed in the Haunted Museum.
1920's Haunted Hand Harp
1920s Hand Harp belonging to a murder victim. On November 30, 2010, Sherry Black, age 64, was found brutally beaten and stabbed to death inside her home and bookstore, B&W Billiards & Books located in South Salt Lake, Utah. A public panel—“The Bookstore Murder: A Journey for Justice”—was held at Kingsbury Hall in April 2023 to share the case and highlight the role of genetic genealogy in solving it. The harp has been heard playing by itself on ONE occasion and has been the center of many unexplained "EMF" spikes and even manipulation of "Movement Devices"
Baron Woolen Mill Brick
An ACTUAL brick from the historically haunted "Baron Woolen Mill" that burnt down in 2015. The mill was originally constructed in 1869–1870 as part of the Brigham City Manufacturing and Mercantile Association, commonly referred to as the Brigham City Co‑Op. Full production of blankets and wool textiles began around 1873. The Baron Woolen Mill developed a reputation as one of the most haunted locations in Utah. Paranormal investigators regularly visited the site, considering it a must-explore ghost locale. A Halloween 2012 feature by KSL dubbed it “Paranormal Disneyland,” highlighting its popularity among ghost hunters and tour groups.
Various Ominous/Cursed Items
This display brings together artifacts connected to locations steeped in paranormal history. Included are shells collected from the Bonneville shoreline, an area often associated with isolation, strange sensations, and unexplained experiences. Also featured is a cross bracelet from the haunted school in Iowa, owned by Sam and Colby, symbolizing faith and protection within a space known for intense paranormal claims. Completing the exhibit is a second, smaller fragment of the infamous “666 Tree” from Ouija Cove, a location long linked to dark legends and ritualistic symbolism. Together, these items represent the convergence of place, belief, and folklore now preserved within the Haunted Museum.
Rare Replica Washoe Club Painting
Washoe Club RARE copy of the painting hanging above the bar. The painting hanging above the bar may be either “Broad River Falls” or the “Haymaking” piece. Though labeled as “By French,” it’s unclear if that denotes the artist’s name or origin. This is a RARE piece of Paranormal culture as the artist who did these replicas no longer makes them which makes this one particularly special.
Actual Painting In The Washoe Club
(Bottom Photo)
Lizzie Borden Death Certificate
A copy of Lizzie Borden's Death Certificate.Lizzie Borden was accused but acquitted of killing her father and stepmother with an axe in 1892, and the case remains one of America’s most famous unsolved murders.
Husband & Wife Cremains mixed together.
Human remains of a Husband and Wife who, together, had their ashes mixed into hour glasses. Below is a copy of BOTH Death Certificates.
Death Certificates for both deceased.
Barry and Carol's Death Certificate. Their ashes were mixed together and places in an hour glass (pictured above).
Skinwalker Ranch Display
This is a "Plate Sized" boulder that I got from Skinwalker Ranch Ridge. I went on a filming trip and before leaving I took a hike up the ridge, carefully watching my steps to make sure I did not trespass. I grabbed this boulder and have caught VERY strong, unexplained EMF emitting from the rock.
Cursed Sketch
An ORIGINAL sketch done by a person suffering from mental illness, depicts a haunting image of a cloaked figure pondering the meaning of life. They say paintings can be haunted. Although a ghost is not associated with this drawing, it's equally as haunting to gaze upon. A mark was left behind, cursing the item with energies long associated with depression.
Deceased Paranormal Investigators Team Shirt and Hoodie.
This shirt and hoodie were owned by my friend and fellow paranormal investigator Kara, and are photographed with Kara wearing the hoodie. December 4th, 2025 she passed away. Personal items often carry residual energy from their owners, and since arriving at the Haunted Museum, these garments are believed to have brought noticeable activity with them. Some even speculate that Kara’s presence itself may still be tied to these items, leaving a lingering connection between investigator and artifact. Prior to her passing, she told her colleagues to "Turn on your equipment I'm going to try to communicate.".. In her honor I leave a piece of equipment running 24-7
Mt St Helens Original Newspaper
This is one of HUNDREDS of ORIGINAL news articles I have related to the eruption of Mount St. Helens. (Check out the date on the newspaper)
"Cursed Coffin"
While not particularly "Special", this coffin display box holds some of my favorite items including, REAL Gold and Silver from Virginia City as well as some scorpions and a spider encased in epoxy.
Bat
Out of my NUMEROUS Bats, this one is my favorite and I wanted to showcase it. It's called a "Java Bat". Bats have a long and complex relationship with the supernatural across cultures. They’ve been seen as omens of death, symbols of rebirth, or messengers between worlds.
Death Head Hawkmoth
The Death’s-head Hawkmoth is a powerful symbol of death, transformation, and the supernatural. Feared in older folklore as a death omen, it has become a Gothic cultural icon—embodying the eerie beauty of life’s fleeting nature and the mystery of what lies beyond.
Squid
Wet specimen squid. In Hawaiian mythology, the Kanaloa is a god associated with the squid or octopus, often seen as a counterpart or sometimes rival to the creator god Kāne.
Charons Obol
Charon's Obol (center). In ancient Greek mythology, Charon was the grim ferryman of the Underworld. His task was to ferry the souls of the dead across the river Styx (sometimes the Acheron) to reach Hades’ realm. To pay for this passage, the dead needed a coin, usually called an obol (a small denomination of Greek currency). Families would place the coin: On the tongue of the deceased,Or under the tongue, Or sometimes on the eyes (a later variation). This practice is often referred to as Charon’s obol.
Texas Prarie Rattlesnake
Texas Prairie Rattlesnake. Displaying rattles was considered good luck and a protective talisman against other snakes—or even evil itself.
Leslie's Family Tree Display
Unopened WWII items that were discovered in the basement of the HAUNTED Leslie's Family Tree Restaurant. Leslie’s Family Tree Restaurant was indeed formerly used as a registered bomb shelter, among many other purposes throughout its history.
Ticket to the USS Iowa
Ticket to the HAUNTED USS Iowa. The USS Iowa explosion is one of the most infamous naval accidents in modern U.S. history. On April 19, 1989 Turret Two (the middle of the ship’s three massive 16-inch gun turrets) Exploded During a gunnery exercise in the Caribbean. The explosion tore through the center gun of Turret Two. The casualties were 47 sailors killed instantly. One of the worst U.S. Navy accidents outside combat.
Alligator Head
Real Alligator head, estimated to have been around 9-12 feet long.
Real X-Rays
The aftermath of a terrible car accident that left both wrists shattered. These are the actual X-Rays before they performed surgery on the patient.
Victorian Mourning Boots Circa 1890-1905
In the 1800s, women’s mourning attire was a visible language of grief, respect, and social duty. Clothing often black or muted in color signaled a woman’s loss and her place within strict mourning customs, which could last months or even years. Beyond fashion, mourning dress reflected emotional restraint, moral virtue, and societal expectations, reminding others that grief was not only felt privately, but worn publicly as a mark of honor and remembrance.
Uranium Glass
Popular from the mid-1800s through the early 1900s, is a type of decorative glass colored with small amounts of uranium oxide. Valued for its pale green or yellow hue, it became especially prized for its eerie glow under ultraviolet light, a feature that was unknown to many of its original owners. Today, uranium glass is a fascinating reminder of Victorian era experimentation, blending beauty, science, and a subtle sense of the uncanny.
Metal Headstone Marker
These were commonly used as simple, affordable memorials, especially during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Marked only with a name and date, they offered a quiet, understated way to identify a grave when stone headstones were impractical or unaffordable. These modest markers reflect a period when remembrance did not require grandeur, only acknowledgment, respect, and a place for the dead to be known.
An autographed photo of Marisol Ramirez
Her portrayal of La Llorona in The Curse of La Llorona represents a modern embodiment of one of folklore’s most haunting legends. Through her performance, the ancient spirit of sorrow and loss was given a tangible human presence for a new generation. As a signed artifact, the photo bridges traditional myth and contemporary horror cinema, making it a powerful piece that connects cultural legend, film history, and the enduring fear surrounding La Llorona’s tale. The Curse of La Llorona
A Piece of The Mercer‑Williams House
Located in Savannah, Georgia, its widely regarded as one of the city’s most haunted historic homes. Built in the 1860s, the house is best known for its tragic history, including the infamous 1981 shooting that took place inside its walls. Visitors and staff have long reported unexplained footsteps, disembodied voices, and an overwhelming sense of being watched, adding to the house’s dark reputation. Today, it stands as a place where Southern elegance and lingering tragedy seem to exist side by side.
Handwritten Prescription Papers, late 1800s
Owning handwritten prescription papers from the late 1800s carries a quiet macabre weight, offering a direct connection to illness, pain, and mortality in a time before modern medicine. Penned by hand, often for potent remedies now considered dangerous or obsolete, these documents reflect an era when treatments blurred the line between healing and harm. As artifacts, they serve as intimate reminders of human vulnerability and the unsettling realities of survival in the Victorian age.
Haunted Display
This collection of assorted items brings together remnants from places and stories steeped in unease: a fragment taken from the infamous hanged Sorrel-Weed House, a real taxidermy bat preserved in eternal stillness, and a CD from Bobby Mackey’s Music World long whispered about as one of the most haunted locations in America. Individually unsettling, together they form a quiet gathering of dark history, lingering energy, and the unsettling sense that some places never truly let go of the past.
Mercer-Williams House Display.
This unsettling assortment blends the ordinary with the otherworldly: A Ghost Hunters coffee mug signed by Joe Chin; dirt collected from the Haunted Mercer-Williams House, still carrying the weight of tragedy; a watercolor painting depicting a haunted house in Oregon, its soft brushstrokes masking something far darker; and an old collectible car shaped piggy bank, worn by time and childhood hands long gone. Together, these items feel less like a collection—and more like remnants of lives, places, and energies that refuse to be forgotten.
Fatal 2025 Utah Car Accident Wreckage
This haunting artifact comes from the site of a fatal car accident, where a lone driver veered off the highway and lost his life.. His identity left respectfully unknown. The lamp, recovered from the wreckage, still bears a functioning button, an unsettling reminder that ordinary objects can survive extraordinary tragedy. Shown above is the actual wreck itself, grounding this piece in stark reality and transforming it from debris into a silent witness of a final moment frozen in time.
Eileen Dietz Autographed Pazuzu Photo
This chilling autographed photo bears the signature of Eileen Dietz, who portrayed the demon known as the “Face of Death,” often associated with “Captain Howdy,” in the horror classic The Exorcist. Her brief but unforgettable appearance seared itself into cinematic history, embodying pure dread in a single, shocking image. As a signed artifact, the photo blurs the line between performance and possession, capturing a moment where fiction felt disturbingly real and still unsettles those who linger too long in its gaze.
Virginia City Cemetery Map & Cemetery Dirt
This framed, recessed display centers on a historic map of the cemetery in Virginia City, a town shaped by boom, bust, and untimely death during the silver mining era. Lining the bottom of the frame is a one-inch layer of authentic cemetery dirt collected from Silver City, grounding the piece in the physical remains of a long-forgotten mining community. Together, the map and earth form a quiet memorial, part history, part relic—where the boundaries between place, memory, and those buried beneath feel uncomfortably close.
Piece of the "666" Tree, Ouija Cove
This artifact is a fragment from the infamous Ouija Cove “666 Tree,” a location long associated with occult rituals and whispered attempts to summon dark forces. Still bearing traces of red paint from one of the painted sixes, the wood stands as a physical remnant of a place marked by obsession, belief, and forbidden curiosity. Removed from its original setting, the piece carries an unsettling presence, less a souvenir, and more a scar left behind by those who sought to open doors better left closed.
Seance Table
At the heart of the museum sits the séance table, deliberate gathering place for communication beyond the veil. Featuring an Ouija board, pendulum with answer board, a yes–no coin, a vintage guide to psychic games, and various occult objects, the table is arranged as both tool and invitation. It is a space designed not merely for observation, but for participation, a controlled attempt to summon, question, and listen, where belief, curiosity, and the unknown quietly converge.
Funeral Procession Flag
This magnetic car funeral procession flag once marked a vehicle moving slowly between the living and the dead. Intended as a signal of respect and mourning, it transformed an ordinary car into part of a final journey, one where time pauses and silence follows close behind. Removed from the road and placed on display, the flag becomes a quiet symbol of passage, loss, and the somber ritual of escorting someone to their last resting place.
1800s Cemetery Coffin Nails
These authentic cemetery nails were hand-picked by me from old mining town burial grounds, where wood markers and fences once struggled to endure harsh land and harsher lives. Bent, rusted, and worn by time, each nail is a small but intimate remnant of graves long forgotten and names lost to history. Removed from the earth, they serve as stark reminders that even the simplest objects can bear witness to death, decay, and the quiet permanence of being laid to rest.
Ancient Fossilized Fish
This complete fossilized fish, discovered in Zion National Park, is a silent remnant of a world that vanished millions of years ago. Preserved in stone, it reveals that the towering cliffs and deserts of Zion were once submerged beneath ancient waters, teeming with life now long extinct. Displayed today, the fossil serves as a chilling reminder of deep time, where entire worlds can disappear, leaving behind only stone impressions of lives that never knew they were doomed to be forgotten.
Signed Photo of Jay Verburg (Ghost Mine)
This autographed photo features Jay Verburg from the TV series Ghost Mine, a man who has spent years exploring some of the most dangerous and haunted mines in the country. Beyond the screen, Jay is a close personal friend, making this piece both a professional relic and a deeply personal connection to real-world paranormal investigation. As a signed artifact, it represents trust, experience, and firsthand encounters with places where darkness, isolation, and the unknown run deep beneath the earth.
Hand Made Ouija Board
This hand painted Ouija board was created by my tattoo artist, making it a one-of-a-kind piece where ritual meets personal artistry. Every line, symbol, and mark was applied intentionally, giving the board a character and energy unlike mass-produced versions. More than a tool, it stands as a collaborative object, infused with creative intent and occult tradition, inviting communication while reminding visitors that some doors are crafted, not found.
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