Jenn and Cory Heinzen bought the “Conjuring” house — as it’s been called — in 2019. They fixed it up a bit, opened the house to paranormal investigators, charged them to stay overnight, and as The Providence Journal says, even ran a daycare out of the home without any troubles. Eventually they felt overwhelmed and sold the house to Jacqueline Nuñez, who transformed the property into a veritable “Conjuring” theme park. But with a buying price of $440,000 and a selling price of over $1.5 million, the Heinzens made out alright (per All That’s Interesting).
On The Conjuring House’s About page, former resident Andrea Perron thanks the Heinzens and Nuñez for taking care of the house in its post-possession days. Perron lived there from 1970 to 1980 — when the events portrayed in 2013’s “The Conjuring” took place — and wrote about those events in 2011’s “House of Darkness: House of Light.” On The Conjuring House’s About page, she describes writing the book as painful but emotionally helpful.
For those needing a refresher on what went down in that quaint 18th-century farmhouse of direst evil: In short, there’s a rather byzantine plot involving escalating supernatural activity that by 1984 necessitated roping paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren into the mix. A vengeful spirit named Bathsheba was blamed for all the house’s horrors.