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How a midnight flash flood turned a Texas summer camp into a disaster zone

A minute-by-minute reconstruction reveals how rising waters, improvised evacuations and collapsing communication led to the deaths of 28 people at Camp Mystic.

November 17, 2025 / 14:32 IST
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Photos show the aftermath of the flooding in central Texas

On the night of July 3, 195 girls settled into their bunks at Camp Mystic, a family-run summer camp along the Guadalupe River in Texas. Taps played after 10 p.m., and the Eastland family — who had owned and run the camp for generations — monitored the forecast from their homes on the property. Heavy rain was expected. Flooding along the river was common. But nothing in the camp’s long history resembled what was coming overnight, the New York Times reported.

Early signs of danger and rising unease

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Shortly after 1 am, the National Weather Service issued a warning about life-threatening flash floods. Dick Eastland, the 70-year-old camp patriarch, was already awake, checking gauges and radioing his son Edward. Staff pulled canoes from the waterfront and watched creeks that were normally dry turn into fast-moving channels. Counsellors from Bug House — a cabin closest to the river — reported water streaming toward their door. The elder Eastland tried to reassure them. For decades, these were the familiar contours of a “normal flood.”

A sudden escalation as water surged into cabins