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There are several haunted locations in the Antelope Valley and surrounding areas. Unfortunately, most of them are inaccessible to the public. Always make sure to visit places legally and with permission from the owner.
https://locoscout.com/location_detail.php?location_id=157
https://maps.app.goo.gl/pHzpX4qJEcfF2pvu5
It looks like you can film here for a fee. It is no longer in use but is still owned and maintained by the Sheriff's Department. I remember going to a Halloween haunted maze that was setup here back in 2004 maybe. Ghost Adventure's did a horrible episode about it called Lockdown in Lancaster. It was Season 24 Episode 3 if you're interested in watching that train wreck.
https://www.lancastermoah.org/single-post/healthcare-in-the-early-antelope-valley
https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2d/163/496.html
https://maps.app.goo.gl/Tvrg9qakC3XToj1PA
I'm pretty sure this is private property and it's surrounded by private property. This is often called the Rosamond Insane Asylum ruins in ghost hunting websites but that is not accurate. This was a tuberculosis sanitarium presumably for patients to recover or extend their lives in the warm dry air of the desert. There was a murder on-site, however the victim ,Casimir Buda, was taken to a hospital where he died several days later.
https://www.fs.usda.gov/r05/angeles/recreation/elizabeth-lake-day-use-area
https://maps.app.goo.gl/UUPkVF41qWAS5piZ8
Half of Elizabeth Lake is private property, but the western half is owned by the Angeles National Forest Service and is accessible by a day use parking area. Several local fisherman line up on the shores here during the day. The haunted part of Elizabeth Lake is that it is supposedly inhabited by a lake monster like the Loch Ness Monster. However, this story originates from the book On the Old West Coast by Major Horace Bell published in 1930. In the book he describes how the road through here was created by the Devil and a team of demons after making a deal with Spanish explorers. Once the road was complete the priest in the group broke off the deal and sent the Devil packing. The Devil's army all climbed into a hole in the earth which then filled up with water and became Elizabeth Lake. Except one monster was left behind, a huge dragon-like creature that would occasionally eat the local livestock once this area was settled in. If you follow the story to it's conclusion though, the beast left the lake in 1890 and flew off to Arizona where it was later killed by some cowboys near Tombstone. Yes, the famous Tombstone Epitaph story of a flying creature was linked to the Lake Elizabeth monster. It has never been seen since.
https://scvhistory.com/scvhistory/lw2371c.htm
https://maps.app.goo.gl/i3xEe2svq16Ud4Nu6
This is private property.
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