Haunted Places in Geneseo, New York
2 haunted locations

State University of New York Geneseo
Erie Hall stands as a dormitory building on the campus of State University of New York at Geneseo, a college town nestled in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York. Constructed as a residence facility for the university's growing student population, the building was designed with the conventional architectural features typical of mid-twentieth-century dormitory construction: narrow corridors, compact living quarters, and communal facilities. The building has housed countless generations of students seeking higher education, its rooms serving as temporary homes for thousands of young people pursuing academic achievement and formative life experiences. Room C2D1, a modest residential space within the dormitory, appeared indistinguishable from any other student housing until 1985, when documented paranormal encounters thrust it into the national spotlight and transformed it into one of the most studied cases of dormitory-based supernatural activity. The building's location in a region with centuries of recorded history and indigenous heritage added layers of historical significance to the campus grounds, though few students understood the full context of the place they inhabited. The dormitory was erected during the post-World War II expansion of American higher education, when universities across the nation constructed residence halls to accommodate unprecedented enrollment. Erie Hall emerged from this period of institutional growth, its construction meeting the functional requirements of student housing while reflecting the architectural sensibilities of its era. The building's design emphasized efficiency and economy, prioritizing utility over distinctive character. For decades, it functioned as an unremarkable component of campus infrastructure, hosting study sessions, romantic encounters, and the mundane activities of undergraduate life. However, the existence of dormitory paranormal accounts stretching back through multiple decades suggests that something far more mysterious may have inhabited the building's spaces from its earliest years, waiting for the right circumstances to manifest fully. On March 13, 1985, student Chris Di Cesare experienced a violent encounter in the shower room connected to room C2D1 that would fundamentally alter the trajectory of his life and establish the dormitory's reputation for supernatural malevolence. According to Di Cesare's detailed account, an unseen force attacked him in the shower, leaving three deep claw marks across his back—physical evidence of contact with something that defied conventional explanation. The attack was severe enough to cause bleeding and lasting trauma, representing one of the few documented cases of a paranormal entity causing verifiable physical injury to a living person. This incident gained further corroboration through photographic evidence: a skeletal image manifestation was captured on film on Valentine's Day, 1985, presumably by Di Cesare or a fellow researcher documenting the haunting. The apparition, appearing in photographs but not visible to the naked eye, suggested the presence of an intelligent entity capable of interacting across the boundary between the visible and invisible worlds. The entity haunting room C2D1, known as Tommy, has become the subject of extensive paranormal documentation and investigation. Witnesses describe a ghostly presence manifesting as a young boy, though accounts suggest Tommy may be trapped in a state of perpetual aggression and torment. Beyond the physical attack documented in 1985, visitors to the room have reported inexplicable poltergeist phenomena, including objects moving of their own accord, disembodied footsteps echoing through corridors, unexplained knockings on doors and walls, and vivid apparitions of a skeletal figure that appears with terrifying clarity. Chris Di Cesare eventually transformed his traumatic experience into a career as an author, educator, and public speaker, dedicating himself to documenting paranormal phenomena and sharing his story through multiple platforms, including a Netflix documentary series titled True Haunting that brought national attention to the Erie Hall haunting and established it as one of the most comprehensively documented cases of residential paranormal activity in American universities.

Erie Hall – SUNY Geneseo
Erie Hall is a residential dormitory building on the campus of SUNY Geneseo, functioning as student housing within the broader infrastructure of this public university. The structure contains multiple residential rooms distributed across several floors, with individual student dormitory rooms housing college-aged occupants who reside on campus as part of their university education. Room C2D1 specifically has become the focal point of paranormal reporting, while the broader building and campus environment provide context for understanding the location's historical and paranormal significance. The building's position within a university campus context creates an interesting intersection between academic institutional functions and paranormal phenomena. Geneseo, located in western New York, represents a settled area with substantial pre-colonial and colonial history, though the university itself was established during the nineteenth century. The dormitory building reflects the standardized architectural patterns of mid-to-late twentieth-century dormitory construction, with institutional design prioritizing functional dormitory accommodation over distinctive architectural character. ERIE Hall's paranormal history centers on a discrete three-month period during the winter of 1985 when paranormal activity apparently reached a peak intensity within room C2D1. The occupant of this room during the haunting period was Chris Di Cesare, a student at SUNY Geneseo who documented his experiences through written journal entries and subsequent accounts. During the three-month period, Di Cesare reported experiencing multiple varieties of paranormal phenomena including hearing voices, experiencing physical contact with unseen entities, and documenting photographic evidence of paranormal manifestation. The phenomena appear to have begun without obvious triggering event and escalated in intensity over the three-month duration before apparently concluding. The specificity of the temporal period—documented as occurring during winter 1985—combined with the documentation through journal entries and photographic evidence, creates a relatively well-documented paranormal case within the broader context of paranormal phenomenon. The subsequent dissemination of Di Cesare's account through paranormal research communities and, more recently, through documentary television programming, has extended the historical reach and cultural impact of the case. The paranormal phenomena experienced by Chris Di Cesare in room C2D1 encompassed multiple manifestation types. Disembodied voices reportedly spoke to Di Cesare within the dormitory room, with communication apparently targeted specifically at him. Physical contact reportedly occurred, with Di Cesare documenting that he had been scratched by unseen forces. The scratches represented an unusual element of paranormal manifestation, as physical contact from paranormal entities remains relatively rare in paranormal documentation. The physical wounds inflicted by the paranormal entity created objective, documentable evidence of contact rather than relying solely on subjective sensory experience. Photographic documentation created additional evidence, with Di Cesare capturing what he interpreted as a skeletal image on photographic film taken on Valentine's Day 1985. The photograph reportedly provided visual documentation of a non-physical entity manifesting within the dormitory room. The combination of multiple paranormal manifestation types—auditory, tactile, and visual—created a particularly intense paranormal experience. The paranormal entity responsible for the phenomena in room C2D1 has been identified in paranormal accounts as Tommy, a student at SUNY Geneseo who allegedly hanged himself on campus. The identity of Tommy and the specific circumstances of his death remain somewhat ambiguous in available sources, though the account consistently identifies him as having died by suicide through hanging. The possibility that Tommy's death occurred on campus, creating a specific geographical connection between the location of death and the location of paranormal manifestation, may explain why the haunting concentrated specifically in room C2D1. The apparent targeting of Di Cesare specifically by the paranormal entity, rather than manifesting generally throughout the dormitory building, suggests that Tommy's spirit either had a prior connection to Di Cesare or developed some form of personal connection or interaction with him. The personality and motivations apparently attributed to Tommy's manifesting spirit—aggressive, physical, and persistently engaged with Di Cesare—suggest a spirit manifesting powerful emotions or unresolved psychological and emotional issues. The documentation of Di Cesare's experiences includes multiple forms of evidence and testimony. Journal entries written by Di Cesare contemporaneously with the paranormal events provide first-person accounts of the experiences as they occurred. Five students who either resided in the dormitory or had contact with Di Cesare during the haunting period provided eyewitness testimony to paranormal phenomena or to Di Cesare's physical and psychological state during the haunting. A parapsychologist apparently provided professional assessment of the paranormal phenomena, though the specific identity and credentials of this researcher remain unclear from available sources. Photographic evidence, specifically the Valentine's Day 1985 photograph allegedly showing a skeletal image, provided visual documentation of anomalous phenomenon. The accumulation of multiple forms of evidence—contemporary journals, eyewitness testimony, professional assessment, and photographic documentation—created a relatively comprehensive documentation of paranormal events compared to many paranormal cases which rely on single witnesses or anecdotal accounts. The contemporary status of room C2D1 at SUNY Geneseo reflects significant changes since the 1985 haunting. The dormitory room remains in use as student housing, with contemporary students occupying the space without reported paranormal phenomena. The apparent cessation of paranormal activity suggests either that the phenomena were temporary or that the original conditions facilitating manifestation have been disrupted or resolved. No recent paranormal reports from room C2D1 appear documented in paranormal research sources, indicating that the haunting appears to have concluded or significantly diminished in intensity following the 1985 period. The use of the room for ordinary student housing, without apparent disturbances to contemporary occupants, contrasts sharply with the intense paranormal experience documented during 1985. The current status of the room as a conventional dormitory space, indistinguishable from other dormitory accommodations, creates an interesting dynamic between the location's paranormal history and its contemporary ordinary function. The paranormal case of room C2D1 at SUNY Geneseo gained renewed attention through the Netflix documentary series "True Haunting," which brought the historical case to a contemporary audience. The television documentary apparently examined Di Cesare's account, interviewed surviving witnesses, and provided contemporary analysis of the paranormal phenomena documented decades earlier. The Netflix programming created significant cultural impact, potentially introducing the case to populations far beyond paranormal research communities. The dissemination of the account through mainstream media platforms represents an interesting intersection between historical paranormal documentation and contemporary paranormal tourism and entertainment. The television program also appears to have generated debate and skeptical analysis, with some sources questioning the evidence supporting the paranormal interpretation of the 1985 experiences. The renewed attention to the case through television documentation has ensured that the historical paranormal account will remain culturally significant within paranormal discourse. The paranormal case of room C2D1 at Erie Hall, SUNY Geneseo represents a relatively well-documented paranormal incident with contemporary evidence and testimony supporting the account of paranormal phenomena. The specificity of the temporal period, the multiple forms of documentation, the eyewitness testimony from multiple individuals, and the persistence of the account across decades all distinguish this case from more anecdotal paranormal reports. The subsequent dissemination of the case through paranormal research communities and contemporary television documentation has ensured lasting cultural significance. The apparent concentration of paranormal activity within a single dormitory room and a discrete time period, combined with the subsequent cessation of documented phenomena, creates an interesting study in the temporal dimensions of paranormal manifestation. For paranormal researchers interested in well-documented cases with multiple forms of evidence, the Erie Hall case provides substantive historical documentation combined with contemporary accessibility through media programming and academic institutional preservation of the historical location.