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O S R : an overnight investigation
When the last inmate was ushered out of the Ohio State Reformatory in 1990, the
heat went with him, and from there it was only a couple of years until the elements
started to shred the paint and plaster, and rust any metal. A lot of the
out-buildings were helped along in their decay by wrecking balls, which made way for
the new jail, right next door.
Keeping the present inmates in the formidable shadow of OSR can't have been an
accident.
The 19th-century structure, inspired by medieval chateaus, was purposely designed
to intimidate those incarcerated there, and it serves its purpose well. The
structure itself makes even the daylight tours worth experiencing, and even then,
standing in the abandoned cellblock, gazing through dusty, yellow light, down a
towering six-story wall of rusting bars, the hair on the back of your neck
bristles.
Despite being owned and maintained by the Mansfield Reformatory Preservation Society, the building is technically
abandoned, and the ravages of time that had set in as far back as the
1970swhen protests were staged for the inhumane living conditions of the
prisonershave largely been left unchecked. The rooms and cells are choked with
dust, and paint peels and flakes from every surface. The floors pop, the pipes bang,
and then, of course, there are the inmates who refused to leave.
Volunteers with the MRPS believe there are presences there, and the natural
assumption is that these would be men who are unhappy over their deaths in OSR. It's
not something you necessarily seemost evidence of the hauntings is
photographic, in the guise of mists and orbs, though some people claim to have heard
footsteps and voices. And others say they have seen things, like shadowy
figures prowling in the entrance hall before anyone is supposed to be inside. One
architect, who spent a day alone in the building, reported having his shirt tugged.
But not everyone needs ghosts: Some are so spooked by the facade, they barely set
foot inside. "Once in a while, you get someone who you wonder why they came," one
MRPS volunteer said at a recent ghost hunt. "They'll get about 50 feet into the
building, then come back and sit on the porch the rest of the night."
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1 of 12 << prev | next >> The Ohio State Reformatorydesigned to intimidate.
O S R : the documentary
A 28-minute film culled from the actual footage of the ZagAgg investigation, with
a soundtrack by Ophelia's Frenzy. The result is as moody, surreal, and eerie as
would be expected.
- Orientation
- In the Walls
- Labyrinth of Rooms
- Solitary
- The Basement
- Credits
Watch the trailer! (3.5mb wmv)
Unfortunately, due to the poor lighting conditions, compressed versions of the
chapters are wholly unwatchable at best, though various compressed and uncompressed versions of the complete film can be downloaded free from archive.org.
This film is also available on DVD+R for $5.
OSR is protected under a Creative Commons license.

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