8 places close to home that will totally creep you out

It’s the season for ghost stories.

The region is filled with countless tales of unearthly beings, creepy sites and chilling encounters.

Here are 8 eerie stories — the stuff of truth or legend, you be the judge — that have bewitched Dayton for years:

>> 7 of Dayton’s most haunted spots

Credit: HANDOUT

Credit: HANDOUT

👻1. THE OHIO STATE REFORMATORY IN MANSFIELD

The Reformatory is known for its grand Gothic architecture and its role in the movie “The Shawshank Redemption.” It is also popular with visitors seeking a paranormal experience.

The sound of footsteps and muffled voices have been heard in the empty prison, according to The Ohio State Reformatory’s website. Behind the prison walls, inmates have died from hanging, disease and setting themselves on fire.

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The prison grounds were also the scene of violence. The farm boss, his wife and daughter were kidnapped and murdered by two parolees in 1948.

A variety of classes in ghost hunting, private paranormal investigations and ghost walks are offered at the prison. As Halloween approaches, the former reformatory is transitioned into "Escape from Blood Prison," a haunted experience on a grand scale.

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👻2. THE BISSMAN BUILDING IN MANSFIELD

The spirits of a child name Ruthie and a former grocery store employee haunt the historic Bissman Building in downtown Mansfield.

According to the story, the child was brutally killed by the employee, who later mysteriously lost his head in an elevator accident.

The building may seem familiar, as it was used as a location in the movie “The Shawshank Redemption” and has been featured on the Syfy Channel.

Looking for a scare? A public paranormal investigation will be held at the building Oct. 27 and a ghost walk will be held Nov. 3. For more information: www.destinationmansfield.com.

>> Scariest places in Ohio have haunted, chilling histories and creepy ghosts

Credit: Nick Graham

Credit: Nick Graham

👻3. THE SORG OPERA HOUSE

The Sorg Opera House in Middletown is believed to be haunted by businessman Paul J. Sorg, who died in 1902.

In 2014, a team from ParaVizionz, a paranormal investigation group, with the help of a pair of mediums, visited the historic opera house with a crew from TV Middletown.

During the visit, the group claimed to have seen the spirit of Sorg sitting in the balcony, encountered a creepy male ghost who stalked women in the group, captured audio of ghosts speaking and singing and photographed a doppelganger.

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👻4. THE LOVELAND FROG

The legend of the Loveland Frog dates back more than six decades.

There are numerous versions of the creepy tale, but all revolve around frog-like humanoids with leathery skin seen near the Little Miami River. In the 1970s, two separate incidents allegedly involved Ohio policemen who said they saw a large frog-like creature with illuminated eyes stand up in the road and leap over a guard rail.

In 2016, a couple playing Pokemon Go claimed to have encountered the creature.

“We saw a huge frog near the water. Not in the game, this was an actual giant frog,” Sam Jacobs wrote to WLWT-TV. “Then the thing stood up and walked on its hind legs. I realize this sounds crazy, but I swear on my grandmother's grave this is the truth.”

Credit: HANDOUT

Credit: HANDOUT

👻5. THE GOLDEN LAMB

The Golden Lamb in Lebanon is known for more than a few ghost tales.

Among them, the scent of cigar smoke accompanies sightings of Charles Sherman, clad in a grey suit, who died at the Golden Lamb Inn.

A little girl named Sarah has been heard throwing temper tantrums in a room filled with children’s toys and furniture, according to Haunted Ohio author Chris Woodyard.

And the spirit of Clement Laird Vallandigham, a Dayton lawyer and politician who accidently shot himself at the inn in 1871, makes the occasional appearance.

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👻6. POASTTOWN ELEMENTARY

A former elementary school in Madison Twp. in Butler County is believed to be haunted by former students.

Darrell Whisman, a former teacher who made Poasttown Elementary his home, told WCPO in Cincinnati in 2016, "We’ll hear a desk being drug across the floor above us. We’ll hear little kids’ footsteps. I’ve heard voices with my own ears when nobody is here but me and my wife. I just can’t explain it."

Another theory for the unusual activity: The site is believed to have been near several tragic train accidents, one in which two locomotives collided head on in 1910, killing 30 people. Without a nearby hospital, the field where the school was built became a triage center. The theory is the spirits of those who died in the accident still remain on the land.

Paranormal investigators have been called in, and the building is also used for community events. According to Whisman, most depart having experienced something strange. He says the school’s motto is “When you leave, you believe.”

>> RELATED: A creepy tour inside Butler County’s haunted former school

Credit: HANDOUT

Credit: HANDOUT

👻7. WITTENBERG UNIVERSITY

Historic Wittenberg University, chartered in 1845, has its share of spine-chilling tales, most notably one about a ghostly horse.

The top floor of Myers Hall at Wittenberg University was used as a hospital for Civil War soldiers. Legend has it that a general, realizing he was about to die, requested that his faithful horse be brought to him. After saying goodbye to his companion, the general died, but the horse would not leave his side and was shot by soldiers.

It is said the sound of hoof beats and the neighing of the horse searching for its master can still be heard on the campus.

>> RELATED: Wittenberg alum returns with ghost tales

👻8. LOUISVILLE’S SEELBACH HILTON

This one is just a short trip away. A mysterious woman on the elevator may greet you at the historic Seelbach Hilton in Louisville.

According to the Historic Hotels of America website, in 1987 a chef working in the hotel saw a woman with dark hair wearing a long blue dress walk into an elevator with the doors still closed.

Moments later, a housekeeper on another floor saw the same woman get into another elevator with closed doors.

A 1936 newspaper report said a woman learned of her husband’s death in an automobile accident as she waited for him at the hotel. So upset by the news, she jumped to her death in the number three elevator. She was reported to have been wearing a long blue chiffon dress.

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