Tuesday, July 8, 2025 - Many parents are still searching for their little girls after flood swept through campgrounds in Texas.
Early morning on the Fourth of July, record-setting flash
floods swept away 27 girls and counselors at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, and
washed through campgrounds where generations of young Texans have spent their
summers along the Guadalupe River.
Christians across the state and the country prayed as rescue
teams navigated the flooded roads between Friday, July 4, and Sunday, July 6,
to retrieve hundreds of campers in disaster areas, which had lost power,
internet, and road access when water levels rose 26 feet in 45 minutes, per
state officials.
By Saturday evening, July 5, at least five of the missing
girls from Camp Mystic—ages 8 and 9—had been reported de@d. The co-owner of the
Christian girls camp, Richard "Dick" Eastland, was also reported
de@d.
On Sunday, July 6, 10 campers and a counselor remain
missing.
The de@th toll across the area rose to over 82 people,
including 28 children, with recovery efforts ongoing.
One of the young victims from the camp, Sarah Marsh, is
the daughter of a professor at Samford University in Birmingham,
according to the school’s president, who asked for prayer for the
family.
At Camp Mystic, the cabins near the river housing the
youngest campers—named Twins and Bubble Inn—took on water from both
directions.
Richard “Dick” Eastland rushed to rescue girls in one, and
his brother Edward Eastland went to the other, directing the sleeping campers
to get on the top bunks as flood levels rose higher and eventually reached the
roofs.
Pictures of the aftermath inside show a tangle of wet bunk
beds, girly bedding, stuffed animals, and electric fans, with dark mud covering
the cabins’ red floors.
Dick Eastland was found in a black SUV with three girls he had tried to save, camp staff member Craig Althaus said in The Washington Post.
Althaus said he found surviving girls on cabin roofs and in
trees.
“Camp Mystic is grieving the loss of 27
campers and counselors following the catastrophic flooding on
the Guadalupe river,” an online statement read. “Our hearts are broken
alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy. We are
praying for them constantly.”
In major cities in Texas, neighborhood Facebook groups and
Instagram stories circulated photos of smiling elementary-age girls with their
names and parents’ phone numbers in hopes that they would be found soon and
their family could finally hear confirmation of their safety.
According to news reports, most parents had only heard
from Mystic by email.
The email read: “We have sustained catastrophic level
floods. If your daughter is not accounted for you have been notified. If you
have not been personally contacted then your daughter is accounted for.”
Dozens received the devastating phone call.
A father was seen searching for his missing child amidst
broken tree branches and mud-spattered cabins.
Michael McCown drove to the Hill Country when he learned of
the flooding. His daughter, Linnie, had been at Camp Mystic, among the youngest
in the Bubble Inn cabin.
Devastating rains that caused flooding had swept through the
area and parts of Central Texas since the early hours of Friday. The
floodwaters killed at least 18 adults and 14 children, including several girls
at the Camp Mystic summer camp, as well as the director of another camp on the
banks of the Guadalupe River.
The search for the missing continues, including about two
dozen Camp Mystic girls who had not yet been found, like Linnie.
McCown went to churches, registered with all the necessary
authorities, and even visited the local morgue to identify a child they thought
might be his. But Linnie was still missing, so McCown headed to the campground
just outside the town of Hunt.
He went into the cabin and looked at the flooded stuffed
toys, picked up some decorative bracelets and looked at the pictures taped to
the wall. McCown said he wanted to get something for each parent of the 14
girls.
“I’ll just walk,” he said.
He walked along the entire camp grounds to the bend in the
river surrounded by rocky limestone cliffs.
"I'll walk until I find something."
McCown walked to the black sport utility vehicle where the camp director,
Richard “Dick” Eastland, was found, along with three girls he was trying to
rescue from the flood.
"Dick di£d doing what he loved," said Craig Althaus, who had worked
on the property for 25 years and described finding some of the surviving girls
in trees and on the roofs of cabins.
Camp Mystic had welcomed around 750 girls, 8 through 17, for a month-long
term five days before the floods hit on Friday, July 4.
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