← All Investigations
Knoxlyn Ridge — a privately owned historic property located just outside Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, in an area already saturated with documented paranormal claims tied to Civil War history. The home carries its own distinct history separate from the battlefield.
April 7, 2026
Inconclusive — Several claims were debunked, but unexplained audio activity captured during a controlled portion of the investigation could not be satisfactorily explained. Jason considers this location a candidate for a follow-up investigation.

Knoxlyn Ridge Investigation: What We Found at Gettysburg's Most Unsettling Private Home

32.9K views on YouTube

The footsteps we captured didn't correlate with temperature shifts, didn't line up with traffic outside, and didn't come from the areas most prone to settling — and by the end of the night, I didn't have an answer for them.

— Jason Hawes
The Investigation

Gettysburg carries the weight of history in a way most places simply don't. But Knoxlyn Ridge isn't just another location riding on the coattails of battlefield lore — this house has its own story, its own atmosphere, and from the moment we walked through the door, it made itself known. Not with flying objects or dramatic apparitions, but with something quieter and, honestly, harder to dismiss.

Findings

I've been doing this long enough to know the difference between a place that feels unsettling because you expect it to and a place that earns that feeling on its own terms. Knoxlyn Ridge, sitting just outside Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, fell into the second category. We pulled up to the property and I made the same call I always make — we go in skeptical. We go in looking for the explanation before we even entertain the idea that something unexplained is happening. That's not a gimmick. That's the only responsible way to do this work.

From the early walkthrough, something caught my attention. Footsteps. Not the dramatic, heavy boot-on-hardwood kind you see in movies, but measured, deliberate sounds coming from areas of the house where none of my team was positioned. My first instinct, as always, was to find the source. Old houses settle. Pipes expand. Animals get into walls. We checked all of it. We mapped the layout, identified the areas generating the most activity reports from the homeowners, and started ruling things out one by one. That's the methodology — eliminate before you investigate. If I can debunk it, I will, and I'll tell you exactly how I did it.

What made Knoxlyn Ridge stand out wasn't any single dramatic moment. It was the consistency. The sounds we documented didn't correlate with temperature shifts, they didn't line up with traffic outside, and they weren't coming from the areas of the structure most prone to settling. We ran our equipment through the locations in question — monitoring audio, environmental conditions, and doing our best to recreate the experiences the homeowners had described. Some of what they reported, we were able to attribute to the building itself. An old house with character, pressure changes, the kind of quirks that can absolutely convince someone something is wrong when there's a perfectly rational answer sitting right there. But not everything got wrapped up that cleanly. The footsteps we captured on audio during a quiet, controlled portion of the investigation didn't have an easy answer by the end of the night. I don't say that lightly, and I don't say it to sensationalize what happened. I say it because it's the truth, and the truth is the only thing worth reporting.

That's what separates a real investigation from entertainment. I'm not here to tell you Knoxlyn Ridge is haunted because it makes for a better story. I'm here to tell you what we found, what we couldn't explain, and where the evidence actually landed. The history of this property, separate from the battlefield history surrounding it, adds context worth understanding — and context matters when you're trying to determine whether reported activity has a pattern or whether it's isolated and random. At Knoxlyn Ridge, there was a pattern. Whether that pattern has a paranormal origin is a question I'm not willing to answer without more investigation. But I'm not willing to dismiss it either.

Verdict

Knoxlyn Ridge is one of those locations that stays with you — not because of anything explosive, but because the quiet, unexplained moments are the ones that hold up under scrutiny. My verdict isn't closed, and that's actually significant coming from someone who spends most investigations finding the rational answer. This one isn't finished yet.

TagsGhostGhost huntersParanormalJason hawesGrant WilsonSam and ColbySatoriSatori hawesCody and satoriDebunkedTapsHauntHauntingHauntedSam & ColbySam golbachColby BrockConjuringConjuring houseThe conjuringSatori and CodyEd WarrenLorraine WarrenScaryTrendingGhost AdventuresZak Bagans
More Investigations
Subscribe for new case files every week.
Subscribe on YouTube