
A Close Look at Camp Mystic
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A Close Look at Camp Mystic
The camp for girls has two sites less than a quarter mile apart, along the Guadalupe River near Hunt, Texas. About 750 girls were attending the camp this week, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick of Texas said at a news conference Friday. About five miles downstream where the two forks of the river converge, the water rose to at least 29 feet on Friday morning, the second-greatest height on record and the highest since the deadly 1987 flood. According to a camp brochure, its cabins are built out of native stone.
Twenty-seven girls attending Camp Mystic in Kerr County are missing following intense flooding in Central Texas, officials said on Saturday.
The camp for girls has two sites less than a quarter mile apart, along the Guadalupe River near Hunt, Texas. The missing girls are believed to have been staying at the Guadalupe River site.
Camp Mystic’s Guadalupe River site Dining Hall Cabins Rec Hall Cabins Cabins for senior campers are at higher elevation. Office Missing girls were in low-lying cabins next to the river. TEXAS Cypress Creek site to the south Dining Hall Cabins Rec Hall Cabins Cabins for senior campers are at higher elevation. Office Missing girls were in low-lying cabins next to the river. TEXAS Cypress Creek site to the south Dining Hall Cabins Rec Hall Cabins Cabins for senior campers are at higher elevation. Office Missing girls were in low-lying cabins next to the river. TEXAS Cypress Creek site to the south Aerial photo by Vexcel Imaging The New York Times
Several girls who are reported missing were in the low-lying cabins on the “Flats,” where junior and intermediate campers live, less than 500 feet from the river bank. Senior campers stay in the nine cabins farther from the river, in a section of the camp called “Senior Hill.”
Rec Hall Dining Hall Office Cabins on the “Flats” Cypress Creek site to the south Rec Hall Dining Hall Office Cabins on the “Flats” Cypress Creek site to the south Rec Hall Dining Hall Office Cabins on the “Flats” Cypress Creek site to the south Note: Aerial imagery taken after the floods. Carter Johnston for the New York Times
About 750 girls were attending the camp this week, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick of Texas said at a news conference Friday.
Camp Mystic has been run by the same family over generations since the 1930s, and some of its buildings have been standing since the 1920s. According to a camp brochure, its cabins are built out of native stone.
Damaged buildings and cabins at Camp Mystic after the floods on Friday. Ronaldo Schemidt / Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
About five miles downstream where the two forks of the river converge, the water rose to at least 29 feet on Friday morning, the second-greatest height on record and the highest since the deadly 1987 flood. Flood stage begins at 10 feet.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/07/05/us/camp-mystic-texas-flooding.html