Buy this entire 62-acre ghost town in Connecticut for just $1.9M
Johnsonville, an abandoned, small town in East Haddam, Connecticut, is on the market for an asking price of $1.9 million (Yes, the entire 62-acre town is asking less than $2 million). Founded in the 1800s, it includes semi-neglected Victorian homes, a general store, post office, restaurant, mill, and a covered bridge (h/t WTOP). The current owner is hotel company Meyer Jabara Hotels, who paid $2.5 million for the town in 2001. The property was previously listed in an online auction in 2014 and sold for $1.9 million, but the bidder was unable to seal the deal. It’s been a ghost town for nearly two decades.
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The town of Johnsonville was once a tiny but thriving mill community until the mid-20th century, home to the Neptune Twine and Cord Mill, which made fishing binding rope.
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In the 1960s, millionaire industrialist Raymond Schmitt purchased the land around the old mill and moved other Victorian-style buildings to the town, hoping to create a popular tourist attraction (his plan never really took off). After he died in 1988, the town fell into decay with no one to care for it.
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While it currently sits abandoned, the town was featured in a music video for Billy Joel’s 1993 hit “The River of Dreams” as well as the 2014 horror movie “Deep in the Darkness” and the Cuba Gooding Jr. film “Freedom.”
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Though there are rumors the town is haunted by ghosts of the mill and Schmitt himself, the Connecticut town has major development potential with lots of woods, old-timey architecture, and an overflowing pond. Past plans have included a senior living center, a large-scale spa, an equestrian center, a vineyard, and a set for a movie company.
[Listing: Johnsonville, East Haddam by Sherri Milkie for William Raveis Luxury Properties]
[Via WTOP]
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Images courtesy of William Raveis Luxury Properties