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Sitting amongst the stories and legends is the Denny house which has been in Waynesburg since before the Civil war. It is the house of Elezear and Louise Denny. Elezear died in 1910 and it was up to his family to maintain the estate. The two houses are located a short walk from each other and seem to share a supernatural connection.
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The stained-glass window, and its infamous portrait of Martha (Moor) Martin has not gone unnoticed in local lore. In the image, her eyes seem to follow those who are near the mausoleum and in the area of the immediately adjacent graves. Some view the image of Martha as a figure of protection, watching over the graves of her loved ones, while others found her a frightful figure, one to be avoided.
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Thomas Jefferson Huffman had the house built in 1907. Huffman was an organizer and CEO of Huffman furniture. Following his death in 1937 the house was passed to his daughter Inez and her husband who owned the home until the Toothman's bought it and turn the home into law offices. The houses built in the same era seem to share a supernatural connection.
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Inside Greene County Historical Society Museum, the doll permanently lives in the dungeon, usually resting in a baby stroller and occasionally seated in a chair (as seen in the back of the photo) scaring staff and visitors at the GCHS Museum all year long. The doll has been found moved over night, in different positions and areas throughout the dungeon. Greene Artifacts: A Museum Mystery
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Kevin Paul, A Greene County native and Co-author Rosemary Ellen Guiley wrote a book in 2018 called "Haunted Hills and Hollows: What Lurks in Greene County" which declared Greene county to be the most haunted county in America. There is now a sequel to the book with untold stories of Kevin Paul's personal encounters sadly, Rosemary passed before the book could be completed.