Month: January 2026

Locations We’re Preparing to Investigate in 2026

ghost hunting investigations 2026

Greensburg Ghost Society doesn’t approach investigations as a checklist of places to “get through.” Some locations become familiar for a reason. Others call for a first visit only after careful consideration. What follows is a mix of places we know well, places we’re returning to with purpose, and locations we’re stepping into for the first time in 2026.

Greene County Poor Farm

The Greene County Poor Farm is one of the most meaningful sites we investigate. We’ve visited this location at least 7-10 times, and it continues to offer depth, nuance, and consistency that reward long-term study. Poor farms carry a particular historical gravity—routine care, hardship, and quiet lives lived largely out of public view. The activity reported here has remained subtle and intelligent rather than dramatic, making it an ideal environment for disciplined observation and pattern recognition. This is not a location we “finish.” It’s one we continue to learn from.

The Anchorage

We’ve investigated The Anchorage before, and it remains both a stunning historic building and one of the more active locations we’ve experienced.

Hotels present complex investigative environments, but The Anchorage has repeatedly shown activity that occurs organically, without provocation. It’s a location that invites continued study rather than one-time experimentation, and returning here allows us to compare experiences and data across visits.

Wildwood Sanitarium

Wildwood is a location we feel strongly about revisiting. During a previous investigation, our team captured a Class A EVP—clear, direct, and obtained under controlled conditions. Evidence of that caliber warrants follow-up. A return allows us to evaluate environmental consistency, rule out variables, and determine whether the experience was isolated or part of a broader pattern. Former medical facilities are layered spaces, and repeat investigations are essential for responsible conclusions.

Hinsdale House

The Hinsdale House has long been on our investigative bucket list due to its extensive history and decades of documentation. This is not a site we approach casually. Its reputation requires emotional regulation, strong team dynamics, and a measured investigative strategy. When we step into a location like Hinsdale, the focus is not escalation—it’s observation, control, and respect for the history already present.

Bellaire House

The Bellaire House will be a new location for the Greensburg Ghost Society. Our approach here will be deliberate—establishing baselines, controlling variables, and allowing the environment to speak before attempting interaction. First visits are about listening more than acting.

Bihl Manor

Bihl Manor is also a new location for our team. Our initial focus will be on environmental readings, historical context, and pattern observation rather than immediate conclusions. New locations require patience. We take that seriously.

Why We Don’t Share Investigation Schedules

Even for locations we know well, we don’t announce investigation dates publicly.

This protects:

  • The integrity of our data
  • Property owners and caretakers
  • The investigative environment
  • The credibility of our findings

What This List Represents

These locations reflect different stages of our work:

  • Long-term research sites
  • Follow-up investigations based on evidence
  • First-time visits grounded in preparation

Some investigations confirm expectations. Some challenge them. And sometimes the most honest outcome is restraint.

Why You Won’t See Our Evidence on Social Media

Hello there. Clyde here. 👻
I get asked this question a lot—usually right after someone leans in and whispers, “So… have you caught anything?”

Short answer: yes.
Follow-up question: “Why don’t you post it online?”

And that’s where things get interesting.

Evidence Needs Context

Paranormal evidence doesn’t float around on its own like a spooky little snowflake. Every photo, sound, or video comes with a long list of details—where it was captured, what was happening at the time, what equipment was used, and what wasn’t paranormal but had to be ruled out. Social media isn’t built for that kind of explanation. It prefers quick clips, hot takes, and comment sections that catch fire faster than an unattended EMF meter. We like understanding over confusion.

Once It’s Online, It’s Not Yours Anymore

Post a clip, and suddenly it’s slowed down, filtered, reposted, and analyzed by people who weren’t there. Within minutes, it’s either declared fake, exaggerated into something terrifying, or treated as absolute proof of something no one can actually confirm. That doesn’t help the investigation—and it doesn’t help the people involved.

People Come Before Proof

Many of our investigations involve private homes and deeply personal experiences. Even when permission is granted, public posting can bring unwanted attention, judgment, or ridicule. That’s not fair to the people who trusted us enough to invite us in. Their comfort matters more than a comment thread.

Investigation Isn’t a Highlight Reel

Real paranormal work is slow. Evidence is reviewed across multiple devices, compared against environmental data, labeled responsibly, and sometimes dismissed altogether. “No evidence found” is still a legitimate result—even if it’s not exciting enough for a feed. Social media rewards drama. Investigations require patience.

We Don’t Want to Create Fear

Dropping unexplained evidence online without careful explanation can escalate fear and fuel sensational narratives. Our goal has never been to scare people—it’s to help them understand what might be happening and what might not. Ghosts aside, panic helps no one.

Where We Do Share Evidence

When we share evidence, it’s done in controlled, educational settings—presentations, consultations, and discussions where there’s time for questions, nuance, and honest answers. That’s where real conversations happen.

Credibility Is Built by Knowing When to Stay Quiet

Anyone can post a blurry photo. Not everyone is willing to say, “This needs more review,” or “We can’t verify this.” Restraint isn’t secrecy—it’s responsibility. And yes, even a ghost appreciates good ethics.

Clyde’s Bottom Line

We’re not here to chase likes, clicks, or viral moments. We’re here to investigate thoughtfully, protect the people we work with, and treat the unknown with respect. Paranormal investigation isn’t content creation. It’s a discipline.

And if you really want to talk evidence, pull up a chair. I’m always happy to chat. 👻

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Greensburg PA