Many of them visited the scariest house in the neighborhood, maybe even in all of Delaware County, with a special connection to Action News.
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Retired Action News Reporter Dann Cuellar is notorious for his intricate Halloween displays. There is a collection of spooky witches, terrifying ghouls, and headstones meant to bring out the screams.
"There's something that opens up!" one trick-or-treater yelled after knocking on Dann's door.
Only the bravest hot dogs and dragons will earn a treat at Dann's house. If they can endure the tricks, sweets are their reward.
"See the boogeyman way in the back? He's terrorizing. I love him," said Dann.
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The display is his gift to his neighborhood.
"We saw so many negative things on the job when we were working that I wanted to do something positive. And I said, 'Let me make something that will bring families together and enjoy themselves with their kids and have a good time,'" he said.
A terrifyingly good time is the goal at Halloween houses around Springfield.
"I think it's definitely the hot spot on the block, that's for sure," said Gabriel Huck, who had a DJ skeleton display spinning tracks in his yard.
"I give out finger lights and I give out good stuff, so it's just a good time," said Joanne Kulsik-Kelly, whose towering skeleton stays in her yard long past Halloween.
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She says it's decorated for every holiday.
To some trick-or-treaters, costumes are just as important as the candy.
"My grandpa passed away recently and he was a firefighter so I thought I could do it for him," said Tommy Rutledge.
Halloween is a family affair in Springfield, where the fun of the scare lasts all year.