Nestled along the banks of the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas, Camp Mystic has been a summer rite of passage for generations of elite white girls since its founding in 1926. Created by University of Texas coach E.J. “Doc” Stewart, the camp was envisioned as a Christian retreat that mirrored its brother camp, Camp Stewart for boys. With a blend of outdoor adventure, spiritual practice, and deep-rooted tradition, Mystic became one of Texas’s most exclusive—and enduring—summer institutions.
At its core, Camp Mystic was always more than a camp. It functioned as a social filter, reinforcing class, race, and regional identity. Founded during the Jim Crow era, the camp operated within a system of de facto racial segregation. While no known documents explicitly stated that Black, Mexican American, or Indigenous girls were barred, the overwhelmingly white makeup of campers, counselors, and alumni for decades makes its exclusionary nature clear. Like many private institutions in the South, racial exclusion at Mystic was enforced through unspoken rules, legacy admissions, and the economic barriers of wealth and connection.
The legacy of that segregation lingers today. Camp Mystic remains a predominantly white, upper-class space. The cost of attendance alone is prohibitive to most. A single 30-day session now costs more than $4,300—often closer to $5,000 once flood-related infrastructure and safety fees are added. A $300 to $400 deposit is required up front, and most campers are enrolled years in advance, often the children and grandchildren of Mystic alumnae.
Over the decades, the camp has grown to encompass 725 acres of Texas Hill Country, including historic cypress cabins, a blufftop chapel, and a sprawling recreation hall. Campers are divided into two tribes—Kiowa and Tonkawa—borrowing names from Native peoples with no meaningful cultural ties. They compete in games, attend daily devotionals, and participate in long-standing rituals like Sunday fried chicken dinners and end-of-session vespers. Phones and electronic devices are banned, preserving an air of rustic purity and nostalgic Americana.
Mystic’s leadership has passed through generations of wealthy Texas families. After Stewart sold the camp in 1937, the Stacy family took over, maintaining control even during its World War II closure, when it was leased to the U.S. Army Air Corps as a convalescent facility. From 1948 to 1987, Inez and Frank Harrison—“Iney and Frank”—ran the camp with an old-school Christian ethos. The third-generation owners, Dick and Tweety Eastland, continued the tradition of preserving the camp’s conservative values and cultural uniformity.
The camp’s alumni list reads like a who’s who of Texas society. Laura Bush once served as a counselor. Children of governors, oil executives, and business magnates have long walked the same trails and sat at the same river’s edge. For many, Mystic is as much a symbol of legacy and identity as it is a summer destination.
And yet, the question lingers: what does it mean to sustain a place like Camp Mystic in the 21st century?
While many of its practices seem quaint or charming to supporters, others see a more troubling story—of a camp that has functioned as a training ground for white privilege, Christian nationalism, and cultural insulation. Its use of Native American tribal names, its refusal to modernize its traditions beyond symbolic gestures, and its high economic barrier to entry make it a time capsule of exclusion. Even now, diversity at Camp Mystic appears limited, its brochures and social media reflecting the same demographics it always has.
Today, as Texas faces widening inequality, increasing climate risks, and sharp political divides, Camp Mystic remains perched on a precarious edge—both literally and figuratively. It is a camp shaped by floods and fire, faith and legacy, and a deep belief in preserving “the way things used to be.”
For some, Camp Mystic represents a magical place of lifelong friendship, tradition, and spiritual growth. For others, it is a stark reminder of how privilege and exclusion are often disguised as nostalgia.
Sources:
-
Texas State Historical Association, Camp Mystic
https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/camp-mystic -
Wikipedia, Camp Mystic
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Mystic -
Reuters, Floodwaters swept through elite Texas camp (July 5, 2025)
https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/some-facts-about-camp-mystic-where-texas-floodwaters-swept-away-dozens-girls-2025-07-05/ -
ThePricer, How Much Does Camp Mystic Cost?
https://www.thepricer.org/how-much-does-camp-mystic-cost/ -
Houston Chronicle, Texas floods threaten Hill Country camps (July 2025)
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-weather/article/texas-deadly-flood-guadalupe-river-20422503.php -
Reddit, r/sanantonio threads on Camp Mystic pricing and culture (2024–2025)
I was wondering how much it cost.
ReplyDelete4500 per 4 week session
ReplyDeleteThat was 15 years ago....what are they hiding?
DeleteInteresting. So the cost was probably much higher in 2025?
DeleteCost was just under $5000 per camper for 4week session in 2011 based on a Texas Monthly article. I doubt the cost is lower 14 years later! Probably close to $20,000 based on other camps in the area that disclose their current rates.
DeleteI had a friend who worked in Kerr county and wanted to enroll her son in a neighboring boys camp a few years ago before she realized how expensive it was. The cost was over $7000/per week. So, somewhere around or over $28,000 for a four week summer session. I don't know what this particular girls camp charges but one can assume it's rates are similar.
DeleteThanks for the info. At some point, maybe someone can provide more financial details for Camp Mystic. That, along with Camp Mystic's finances, create an important story about American Greed and race and class privilege.
Deletehttps://www.texasmonthly.com/being-texan/the-not-so-happy-campers/ Family ownership was locked in a nasty lawsuit over finances and ownership several years ago. If you’re looking for finances info I’m sure the court records would be a good place to start.
DeleteAn additional $700 for safety? No round the clock monitoring for flood, fire, and security. No adult awake with an ear toward the weather? Weather radios cost around 30 bucks...there should be one in every cabin. Lawsuits much?
ReplyDeleteGiven the financial status of the victims, that's very likely.
DeleteYes. This was a money making opportunity for a multi millionaire who only catered to white privileged girls on purpose ! Eastman fell way short of meeting g the Christian description the alumni painted him to be. The loss of life specifically attributed to Camp Mystic is on his hands and that family.
DeleteAnd that story of American Greed hasn't been told.
DeleteClearly the add-on for safety appears foolish now. Perhaps at some point additional security and safety procedures were contemplated but never implemented. Perhaps procedures were administered but ultimately proved ineffective. Either way, a simple risk assessment would have immediately identified the liability and offered remedies. One may speculate that the safety deficiencies were conveniently ignored as part of Camp Mystic’s reluctance to change its culture to comply with contemporary life safety expectations. There also was a report that an official Texas safety inspection found no regulatory infractions in the Camp’s operation immediately preceding the 2025 flooding incident. Cultural intransigence and politicalization may have combined to contribute to the eventual tragedy. Certainly, these are two elements that should be front-and-center to an investigation into the incident. The question remains: Will they?
ReplyDeleteWe have seen this a number of times following national tragedies, about people who gave warnings and of leadership that ignored it.
DeletePBS Newsweek just reported a number of Camp Mystic buildings were removed from FEMAS 100-year flood risk maps!! I’m assuming to cut insurance/remodeling costs to meet requirements!?!
Deletehttps://youtu.be/KIGXKQeOwGY?si=cJ4Ewg1UnH4pPCLQ
Won't be surprised if we see a PBS Frontline documentary on this unholy mess.
DeleteDoes Camp Mystic pay taxes?
ReplyDeleteGood question. It's privately owned and operated, so it may not be easy to track.
DeleteThis Camp has continued to promote racism and The Lord said NO MORE, IT MUST END NOW! BYE MYSTIC FOREVER since it has now turned into a grave yard.
ReplyDeleteIt's a subtler form of structural racism that many people would deny. But numbers don't lie.
DeleteSo, a bunch of innocent little girls were so racist that the Lord said no more and ended their lives?? You are a disgusting and vile person.
DeleteThey would’ve continued the tradition of racism, exclusion and white Christian nationalism. It sounds kinda vile but so is killing unarmed innocent black children. So is removing undocumented foster children, handcuffing children of undocumented immigrants and forcing toddlers to represent themselves in immigration court. The difference is, if it’s to be believed…God took those children to punish their parents and as a warning to those like them…to change their ways. Instead of receiving and heeding that message, you’ve chosen to be offended. All I can say to you is, if you’re a believer, you’d better change your ways. Focus less on how offended you are about the truth they told you and try to understand the message. Greed, Glutony, Selfishness, Elitism, racism, cruelty and white Christian nationalism are the devil’s tools
DeleteAnonymous, you make several good points about oppressive ideologies and systems of injustice, but we cannot simply assume that all those who perished would have been part of the problem. There are too many cases of folks who have turned around, seen the light, and made a positive difference.
DeleteHow about God in the New Testament?
DeleteCertainly, we want to reduce disparities for children that create lifelong barriers for low income or marginalized racial and ethnic groups. However, I don't want to continue the level of hate that is dividing this country. The death of any child or adult is a tragedy. We need more media attention and concern for children of color--not vilification of the children at Camp Mystic who are not responsible for the choices of their parents. I think that the story received a lot of press not just because the children were white but also because of the lack of foresight of local officials to (apparently) monitor the rainfall and river rise all during the night after initial NWS information. I think the event also received additional attention because federal cuts for FEMA and NOAA staff and the question of delays in authorization of search and rescue teams and other aid. I don't want to protest wealth and racial/ethnic inequity by being indifferent to the suffering of people even if they are from a privileged class.
DeleteDo you think your proposal would make a difference? And how would this proposal be possible?
DeletePrivate organizations dont have to comply with the wants of others. Still a free country. People complaining about the camp wouldnt like it anyway.
DeleteIt doesn't matter what race we belong to; we're all going to reap whatever we sow in our lifetime.
ReplyDeleteI wish that were true, but it frequently doesn't work that way.
DeleteIt is true. There is no need to wish it. Does it happen? of course, however, there are far more good people on this planet than bad. Unfortunately, the media plays a huge role in affecting people's world view. Death, tragedy, and rage are the opiates of the masses today and the media feeds this frenzy in order to garner viewership and clicks that in turns makes money. It is a completely distorted view of the world.
DeleteYou definitely have a point about the media and how it exploits tragedy for profit.
DeleteJust compare the Rio Grande do Sul floods in 2024 and the Valencia floods in 2024 compared to this one in Texas. As well as the current tragedies in the East Coast / North Carolina.
DeleteAlthough it was/is indeed geared towards the wealthy and privileged, the camp also offered paid scholarships for underprivileged kids.
ReplyDeleteA story of counselor bravery, 19 year old Silvana Garza Valdez and MarÃa Paula Zárate, two Mexican American girls that saved the 20 children in their care, has been conspicuously absent in the tales of bravery and derring do post flood. I wonder if those gals were the counselors of the "charity" kids. In which case both heroines and the saved were unimportant in the media's eyes.
And that's fucked up.
If you have any more info, please let us know.
DeleteWhen I went to Camp Stewart in the 90s, I smashed a Mexican fellow camper's face with a rock for cutting in line. I didn't get punished in any way except for a warning not to smash kid faces with rocks anymore. At the time I was thinking what the adults were saying about Mexicans coming into our country. I certainly knew not to hit any white kids that hard.
DeleteCheck out the book: “ Harvest of Empire: The History of Latinos in America” By Juan Gonzales.
DeleteIt would open your even more to today’s issues..
Thanks for the source. Looks interesting. A link to the book is at https://archive.org/details/harvestofempireh0000gonz
DeleteOn top of the co-opted tribal names, they also adorn their team captains with faux tribal headdresses. Always have and still do in the big 2025
DeleteI am not anonymous. My name is David. Whatever “side” you wish to take this is a powerful story and event. The children who died deserve the respect of our discussion and debate. Their lives will be honored as we gather as humans to examine humanity.
ReplyDeleteDavid, I agree with you. I also believe that children who die across the planet also deserve the respect of our discussion and debate.
DeleteIt doesn't matter what your socioeconomic level may or may not be, or whether you believe it was an "act of God", decades of political foot dragging & procrastination, bad planning, widespread ineptitude, or just plain bad luck, this flood event was clearly a tragedy for EVERYONE it touched. It just breaks my heart to see the utter devastation to an area that I've known & enjoyed for many years.
DeleteThat being said, I am struck by the fact, except for this one brave soul, no one else is willing to "own" their comments. Instead, even while preaching that white privilege & elitism, Christian Nationalism, racial & ethnic prejudice, etc etc, must end, they chose to hide behind the cloak of anonymity. But that seems to be the inherent nature of social media. People feel free even justified to say rude, hurtful, & even downright vicious things that they wouldn't dare say in person or in public. Thank you, David, for having more cojones & backbone than apparently many others on this forum.
Why are people here focusing on the economic status of the people that chose to go there? Its not a kkk hideout/ training camp! There's much more to it that people seem to be overlooking here. Its a tragedy nonetheless that children perished there. 🥲
ReplyDeleteYou are correct. It was a tragedy. But that doesn't mean we should avoid discussing class in this story. We do not live in a classless society.
DeleteAt Camp Stewart on the other side growing up, they made us sing Dixie songs that ended "the South should have won!" It's definitely a white nationalist training camp.
DeleteThis whole site is BS. Dozens of kids were lost you fools...G-D rules and we live in a universe of Justice and the EYES of TRUTH are always watching you. BE careful what you say.
ReplyDeleteExactly dude. They got what God ordained.
DeleteGod in the Old Testament killed a lot of children to punish the sins of the adults, especially for the one race enslaving the other sin. But also other sins, for example entire nations becoming so sinful that everyone should perish in a great flood, or under fire storms--including small infants. In Houston, our oil money, strip clubs, and white supremacy are not exactly the holy trinity. I met Bush as a kid, learned money makes you a superior person, Mexicans need to be sent back, and black kids have a bad culture. Our boy scout troop in River Oaks organized fag hunts, our parents organized Enron, and our senior statesmen at Baker Botts the invasion of Iraq to plunder so much oil wealth. Our parents defrauded, enslaved, and massacred their way into enough wealth to build those fine River Oaks mansions. We were sent to Camp Stewart and Camp Mystic to mold us into the next generation to proudly repeat the cycle. Compared to us, how could you say Pharaoh, Sodom, or Gomorrah were any worse, any more deserving of life?
Whether we live in a universe of justice, and justice for all, is a deep question. Not everyone agrees. And there are many data points that suggest the contrary.
ReplyDeleteYeah, the climate change is real, the climate change ecocide is real, and the climate change Holodomor is 100% real. I don't think I need to preach against the choir, but yeah, the ruling classes/elites are already preparing themselves for it, billions will very die because of climate change, 8C-10C above the average is going to kill most species and most humanity, the sixth mass extinction.
ReplyDeleteI don't think that G-D rules and that we live in a universe of Justice, the Abyss/Void is the basic of nature/universe, the Abyss/Void created all life and he is the one that makes evolution and those kinds of stuff happen. And we have many data points that suggest the Abyss/Void is not more real than the concept of Universe/Nature, but yeah, as you prolly know, skeptics will always try to disprove this, it's okay, that's how science is supposed to work.
ReplyDeleteThe Voidpunk Movement and the Voidling Movement are right about the Abyss/Void, despite I agree that those started to appear once that the world started to get very downhill, like the Voidpunk movement in the 1st Trump Term in 2017 and the Voidling Movement during the Biden's Term in 2023-2024.
ReplyDelete