Haunting photos show a glimpse into Texas’ Camp Mystic cabin
Stuffed animals, a lunchbox, a pink blanket.
Those were among the belongings left behind after a raging torrent from Texas’ Guadalupe River overwhelmed a cabin that was occupied by 8 and 9-year-old campers.
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The “Bubble Inn” bunkhouse hosted the youngest kids at Camp Mystic, an all-girls summer camp caught in the deadly July 4 flooding in the state’s Hill Country.
All 14 campers and two teenage counselors in the cabin were either killed or lost.
The cabins for the youngest kids had been in the lowlands, near the river and another creek.
Staff have recalled the frantic effort to evacuate the girls, foisting them through cabin windows and carrying them, barefoot and shivering, as the water gushed in from two sides.
“It made like a swirl right around those cabins like a toilet bowl,” one camp employee told the Washington Post
But major questions remain surrounding the camp’s emergency plan and whether staff were warned about the anticipated flooding too late.
In total, 27 people died at Camp Mystic, including the camp’s owner, who worked through the night trying to rescue the youngsters.
He was found with the bodies of three girls near his SUV and died on the way to the hospital.
But for Michael McCown, matters of “how” and “when” were meaningless.
For him, the only question was if his daughter was alive.
McCown’s girl, eight-year-old Linnie, had been among those missing from Bubble Inn, and when the waters receded, her dad combed the debris-littered grounds and riverbanks for his little girl.
“She’s out there somewhere with all her friends,” a dazed McCown told the Washington Post from the scene. “She was the sweetest little thing.”
Searchers would eventually find Linnie’s body, and all but two of the Bubble Inn victims have been recovered. A camper and a counselor remain missing.
In total, three children and a counselor from Camp Mystic are unaccounted for.
Michael McCown later remembered his daughter in a social media post.
“She filled our hearts with so much joy we cannot begin to explain. We are going to miss her so very much, but know she’s up there shining bright,” he said.
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