The Fight to Save the Conjuring House Name: Trademark Battle Threatens One of Paranormal's Most Iconic Locations
“The name 'Conjuring House' wasn't built by an LLC — it was built over decades, and it belongs to the history of that place. When you lay out the full timeline, a picture emerges that is very difficult to explain away.”
— Jason Hawes
For years, the Arnold Estate in Rhode Island has been known around the world as The Conjuring House — a name that carries decades of history, cultural recognition, and the trust of an entire paranormal community. Now, a new battle has emerged, and this time it's not about ghosts. It's about a trademark application that could strip that name away from the property itself and hand it to a pair of LLCs with a very different agenda.
I want to be straightforward with you, the way I always am. When I first started looking into the trademark application filed under Serial Number 99449309 with the USPTO, I approached it the same way I approach any investigation — I wanted the facts, the documents, and the timeline before I formed any opinion. What I found genuinely troubled me, not just as someone who has spent time at that property, but as someone who cares deeply about the paranormal community and the locations that matter to it.
The two entities at the center of this are Haunted Homes LLC, registered in Connecticut, and Summit & Stone LLC, registered in Rhode Island. Both of these registries are publicly available, and I encourage every single one of you to look them up yourselves. Pull the records. Review the filings. When you do, start paying close attention to the claimed first use dates on the trademark application. That's where things get interesting — and not in a good way. The claimed first use dates, when compared against the documented and publicly verifiable history of the property being referred to as The Conjuring House, raise serious questions about the legitimacy of those claims. This isn't my opinion alone; it's something you can verify independently by cross-referencing publicly available information with what's stated in the application itself.
What's at stake here goes far beyond a name. If this trademark were to be granted, it could have sweeping consequences for the property and the people who have supported it. We're talking about the potential shutdown of the GoFundMe that helps keep the estate running, the end of merchandise sales that provide the property with income, the redirection of web traffic away from the actual location, and ultimately the ability of the property to sustain itself and remain accessible to the paranormal community. A new website has already been created as part of this effort — which tells you something about the coordination and intent behind these moves. This isn't a coincidence. When you lay out the full timeline of events, from the LLC formations to the trademark filing to the new website, a picture begins to emerge that is difficult to explain away.
I've been doing this work long enough to know that not everything is what it appears to be on the surface, and I always push people to look deeper before drawing conclusions. But I've also been doing this long enough to recognize when something doesn't add up. The history of the name 'Conjuring House' is tied to that physical property — to the land, to the family that lived there, to the events that inspired a film seen by millions of people around the world. That recognition wasn't built by an LLC. It was built over decades, and it belongs to the history of that place. The good news is that our opposition has now been formally instituted by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, which means this case is officially moving forward for review. That matters. It means there is a legitimate process in place, and the record will be examined.
I'm not here to tell you what to think — I'm here to make sure you have access to the information so you can think for yourself. Review the trademark application, pull the business registries, look at the timeline, and come to your own conclusions. What I can tell you is that the fight to protect the Conjuring House name is far from over, and the paranormal community's voice in this process matters more than ever.