Below this article please don’t miss the survivor stories of individuals from the 1987 tragedy

By  MICHAEL PHILLIS and MELINA WALLING

Cindy Manley was a summer camp counselor in 1987 when a different devastating flood scarred the Texas Hill Country.

The Heart O’ the Hills camp is on the Guadalupe River, where a massive search continues for more than 160 people who are believed to still be missing after catastrophic flooding over the July Fourth holiday. Decades earlier, Manley said there was an informal system in place when the river started rising: camps upstream would call down a warning and then get kids out of their bunks and to higher ground.

During the flood of 1987, Manley recalled a floating canoe injuring camp director Jane Ragsdale. But Ragsdale, 68, was among the more the than 100 victims who died in the flooding that began July 4, many of them in Kerr County.

“This water, it did something different,” Manley said. “Jane knows floods more than anybody else. There’s no way she would have been sitting in her house if she had thought this was dangerous.”

It is at least the fifth time in the last century that flooding near the Guadalupe River has turned deadly. The area, which is known locally as “Flash Flood Alley,” has hills that quickly gather water and funnel it into narrow river banks. Water rises fast, catching people by surprise.

Here is a look at the river’s deadly history of flooding.

The home of Richard and Angie Navarro floats through the town of Cuero, Texas as floodwaters from the Guadalupe River rise on Monday, Oct. 19, 1998. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)
The home of Richard and Angie Navarro floats through the town of Cuero, Texas as floodwaters from the Guadalupe River rise on Monday, Oct. 19, 1998. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

Frantic evacuations in 1987

This mid-July flood killed 10 teenagers and injured 33 others. Water overwhelmed the river and its tributaries, forcing hundreds to flee. At a Christian academy, buses evacuating children initially encountered modest flooding. While some vehicles turned around in time, a bus and van were stranded when the river rose rapidly.

As the children were trying to leave the stranded buses to safety, a “wall of water, estimated to be as much as half a mile wide, rushed upon the campers,” according to a government report. It scattered the kids. A bus with Seagoville Road Baptist Church on the side was pictured slammed against tangled trees, at an angle and partly under water.

Water overflows from the Canyon Lake spillway near New Braunfels, Texas, Friday, July 5, 2002, adding to the flood waters along the Guadalupe River. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
Water overflows from the Canyon Lake spillway near New Braunfels, Texas, Friday, July 5, 2002, adding to the flood waters along the Guadalupe River. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

A deadly morning flood in 1978

The amount of rain was extraordinary – 30 inches fell on parts of the Hill Country between Aug. 1 and 3.

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Survivor of 1987 Texas camp flood recalls eerily similar experience to Camp Mystic horror

By Jennie Taer and Alex Oliveira NY POST

A former camp counselor during the devastating 1987 Texas floods told The Post on Monday that the tragedy was eerily similar to what happened to the young campers on the same river last week.

The Rev. Richard Koons was a youth pastor at a church camp in Comfort in July of that year when a sudden rainstorm dropped 12 inches of rain in just 45 minutes — flooding the Guadalupe River with 25 feet of water in less than an hour.

Just like Camp Mystic — the girls’ Christian camp which was swept away during torrential rains at the cost of nearly 30 lives Friday — Koons’ camp was located on the banks of the Guadalupe and found itself inundated with water and scrambling to evacuate.

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