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A Florida real estate agent has unveiled a creepy dungeon below a house that had been listed for sale, insisting that she has never seen something like it before.
Jessica Law posted the video which shows her walking through the house and opening a white door.
Viewers can see grid-like iron door that opens to a staircase that leads down to the 'dungeon'.
Law explained: 'It is an iron door with a swinging latch that leads down to an underground room.'
The creator says in the video that the original house had been built in 1958.
As she walks down the stairs, viewers can see a white concrete room that has a functional water system, electricity and a dehumidifier in place.
They can also see a multicolored rug and a red couch kept in the corner.
Viewers can see grid-like iron door right before to a staircase that leads down to the 'dungeon'
Law asks in the video what people think the room was used for and if they would be willing to stay there.
The TikTok community soon began to reply and came up with theories of their own - both positive and terrifying.
One user said that the room was a 'nuke bunker cause door latch is on inside, also wrap around concrete walls help against initial radiation exposure (can't go around corners). we have one in our basement (sans security door).'
Another quipped: 'Just a storm shelter. Look at side of door handle is on.'
One user went down a fictional road and wrote: 'Thats a werewolf den for full moons! I got one in my house too' while another said what everyone feared: 'It is a torture room.'
One concerned user also wrote: 'Safe room. For post apocalyptic purposes.'
As she walks down the stairs, viewers can see a multicolored rug and a red couch kept in the corner
The room was equipped with a functional water system, electricity and a dehumidifier in place
This house is just one of many homes that have been featured on TikTok following the discovery of a secret room.
New York-based content creator Mystee Ipong had posted a TikTok series that documented her journey of finding a 'random room in [her] basement that has been closed up in [her] 200 year-old house.'
She 'noticed there was a leak' with 'water backing up' from a mysterious spot in the basement, and her plumbers told her she needed to tear down the wall so they could find the broken pipe causing the damage.
In a series of videos, Mystee's husband, Ken, is shown attempting to open the wall up in their 'creepy basement,' as she explained the 'interesting history' she found out over time to her followers.
Mystee informed her viewers that there was new stone 'covering up a whole room and you can even see the doorway around it.'
Her goal was to figure out what was inside the 'creepy room that's been blocked in.'
A woman has discovered a secret room hidden in her basement. Pictured is the 200-year-old house from the outside
New York-based Mystee Ipong posted a TikTok series that documented her journey of finding a 'random room in [her] basement that has been closed up in [her] 200 year-old house'
She later confessed that she went down a research 'rabbit hole,' and shared that because the pair lived 'right outside Rochester,' she knew 'there were some ties to the Underground Railroad.'
Mystee explained that famed abolitionist Harriet Tubman was in Rochester at one point since it was one of the places where enslaved people stopped on their journey to freedom and Frederick Douglass owned a house in the city.
However, she wasn't sure if her specific town had ties.
The home was owned by Lucy Jane Blodgett, which she knew because they bought the original lithographs for the house online.
Mystee also looked up Clarkson and the Underground Railroad, and found that there was a known station eight minutes away.
She emphasized that the distance is only half a mile from her house, which she found interesting.
Once she knew the name of the owner of the house, she began searching for the last name and eventually found a person 'who posted on many different discussion boards about having a great, great uncle that was part of the Underground Railroad.'
His name was John Blodgett and after checking his ancestry, she found out that he was indeed the great grandson of Lucy herself.
The pair also discovered through the historic district that there was a mill nearby and some of it was preserved.
The pair discovered 'through the historic district [that] there was actually a mill here and evidently some of it's preserved'
Mystee posted a fourth follow-up video showing the mill and confirmed that there was a 'tunnel that runs underneath' it and she believed that it was 'protected'
The mill was located only 100 yards from her house, so they went to check it out.
She told viewers that she reached out to both John and the Historic Society in an attempt to get more information.
Mystee posted a fourth follow-up video showing the mill and confirmed that there was a 'tunnel that runs underneath' it and she believed that it was 'protected.'
She also discovered that one of the descendants of one of the previous owners of the house was related to a 'fairly prominent family' within their village and they 'have a preserved house closer up into the village center.'
Mystee admitted that she was 'super interested in the history' and that it had been the highlight of purchasing the home.