The Dessert That Was a Staple in the Paul and Linda McCartney Household

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<p>Korin MillerJuly 12, 2025 at 11:31 PM</p>

<p>The Dessert That Was a Staple in the Paul and Linda McCartney Household originally appeared on Parade.</p>

<p>With a last name like McCartney, the association is automatically drawn to Beatles legend Sir Paul McCartney. But way before Linda Louise Eastman met her future husband and changed her name to Linda McCartney, she was an accomplished individual all on her own. Linda wore many hats: She was an accomplished rock photographer, but also went on to become a musician and a pioneer for vegetarianism in the United Kingdom, eventually launching her own Linda McCartney food brand that specialized in plant-based meals.</p>

<p>Vegetables were certainly her beat, but bear in mind that Linda McCartney also had her husband and their four children to please, so she also had to have some desserts up her sleeve. In a 2023 Instagram post, Mary McCartney (the daughter of Linda and Paul) shared her mother's brownie recipe and noted that the dessert was always a hit among her family, as well as her school friends.</p>

<p>Related: The Surprising Way John Lennon Liked to Eat Cereal</p>

<p>View this post on Instagram</p>

<p>A post shared by Mary McCartney (@marymccartney)</p>

<p>"My British school friends used to love it when my Mum baked a fresh batch of brownies," Mary wrote in the post. "These were very American and not that well known in the UK, although now, of course, they are famous worldwide." (Linda was from Scarsdale, New York, so we suspect she knew her way around a brownie.)</p>

<p>Those same brownies also made their way into the cookbook, Linda McCartney's Family Kitchen, which features nearly 100 of Linda's plant-based recipes. Published in 2021, the cookbook celebrates Linda's legacy in the kitchen. So, what made her brownies such a hit with her family and friends? Here's what you .</p>

<p>Related: The British-Inspired Way to Make Brownies 10x Better</p>

<p>😋😋 SIGN UP to get delicious recipes, handy kitchen hacks & more in our daily Pop Kitchen newsletter🍳🍔</p>

<p>What Makes Linda McCartney's Brownies So Great?</p>

<p>Most people's family brownie recipes are just slightly elevated riffs of boxed brownie mixes. Don't get us wrong—we love a good boxed brownie glow-up. But Linda McCartney's from-scratch recipe has a distinctive flavor that no amount of add-ins or hacks can replicate.</p>

<p>These brownies are packed with plenty of dark chocolate (Linda recommends at least 70% cacao). The dark chocolate gives the treats a slightly bitter, earthy flavor. The recipe, like many brownie recipes, doesn't call for much flour, which helps the treat bake up moist and fudgy.</p>

<p>Related: How to Make a Boxed Brownie Mix 10x Better, According to Food Network Star Duff Goldman</p>

<p>How to Make Linda McCartney's Brownies</p>

<p>Mary shared the recipe for her mom's brownies on Instagram, along with a delicious-looking photo. You can find the full recipe there, but here's the gist of how to whip these up.</p>

<p>To start, preheat your oven to 350°. Grease and lightly flour a 9-by-9-inch pan. Melt the dark chocolate until it's glossy and smooth, then let it cool a bit. In a separate bowl, whip some softened butter (or vegan butter) until pale, then beat in sugar until light and fluffy. Crack in a few eggs, one at a time, whisking well. Stir in a splash of vanilla and the cooled chocolate. Fold in the flour (she calls for self-rising flour) to bring it all together into a thick, shiny batter.</p>

<p>Pour the batter into the prepared pan, smooth the top and bake until just set and still fudgy in the middle, about 15 minutes. Let cool slightly, then cut into squares. Serve warm or at room temperature with a cold glass of milk or a scoop of vanilla ice cream.</p>

<p>Related: Kyra Sedgwick's Signature Dish Is So Relatable (and Kevin-Bacon Approved)</p>

<p>The Dessert That Was a Staple in the Paul and Linda McCartney Household first appeared on Parade on Jul 12, 2025</p>

<p>This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 12, 2025, where it first appeared.</p>

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The Dessert That Was a Staple in the Paul and Linda McCartney Household

<p>- The Dessert That Was a Staple in the Paul and Linda McCartney Household</p> <p>Korin MillerJuly 1...

Kate Middleton Returns to Wimbledon After Her 'Rollercoaster' Recovery Reveal

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  • Kate Middleton Returns to Wimbledon After Her 'Rollercoaster' Recovery Reveal</p>

<p>Stephanie Petit, Logan HollandJuly 12, 2025 at 11:36 PM</p>

<p>Alamy Live News</p>

<p>Kate Middleton at Wimbledon on July 12, 2025</p>

<p>Kate Middleton attended Wimbledon for the first time of the 2025 tennis tournament, keeping with her summer tradition</p>

<p>The Princess of Wales of the patron of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club and regularly presents trophies to the competitors</p>

<p>Last year, Princess Kate attended the men's singles finals in a rare appearance amid her cancer treatment</p>

<p>Kate Middleton is back at one of her favorite summer outings: Wimbledon.</p>

<p>The Princess of Wales, 43, stepped out at the prestigious tournament for the first time in 2025 to see American tennis star Amanda Anisimova and Poland's Iga Swiatek compete in the women's singles final on Saturday, July 12.</p>

<p>Kate, who took her seat in the royal box at Centre Court, continued her recent streak of tailored elegance in a white belted blazer-style top and cream pleated skirt — a silhouette she also embraced earlier this week during the French state visit.</p>

<p>That outing comes shortly after her emotional revelations about the difficulty of finding her new normal following cancer treatment.</p>

<p>On July 2, Princess Kate visited Colchester Hospital in Essex, where she spoke candidly about her cancer journey.</p>

<p>Karwai Tang/WireImage</p>

<p>Kate Middleton at Wimbledon on July 12, 2025</p>

<p>"You put on a sort of brave face, stoicism through treatment. Treatment's done, then it's like, 'I can crack on, get back to normal,' " she said. "But actually, the phase afterwards is really, really difficult."</p>

<p>"You have to find your new normal and that takes time...and it's a rollercoaster, it's not smooth, like you expect it to be," Kate added. "But the reality is you go through hard times."</p>

<p>Karwai Tang/WireImage</p>

<p>Kate Middleton on July 12, 2025</p>

<p>Kate has regularly attended Wimbledon over the years, even before Queen Elizabeth appointed her as patron of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in 2016. She has watched the tournament in person every year since she married Prince William in 2011, apart from the 2013 matches, which took place when she was "heavily pregnant" with Prince George and doctors advised against her attending, and when Wimbledon was canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.</p>

<p>Princess Kate's return to Wimbledon comes after she attended the men's singles finals in July 2024, marking one of her few appearances of the year as she mainly remained out of the spotlight amid her cancer treatment. She announced in September 2024 that she had completed chemotherapy, adding a few months later in January that she was in remission.</p>

<p>Karwai Tang/WireImage</p>

<p>Kate Middleton at Wimbledon on July 14, 2024</p>

<p>On July 14, 2024, the royal received a standing ovation as she made her way to her seat in the front row of the Royal Box at Centre Court, joined by her daughter, Princess Charlotte, and sister, Pippa.</p>

<p>After the match, Princess Kate headed down to the court and presented Carlos Alcaraz with the winning trophy after defeating Novak Djokovic.</p>

<p>Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage? Sign up for our free Royals newsletter to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!</p>

<p>The hospital visit earlier this month marked her first public outing since her surprise withdrawal from Royal Ascot on June 18. The Princess of Wales was said to be disappointed with not being able to attend Ascot this year but is determined to find the right balance as she returns back to public work amid her continued recovery.</p>

<p>on People</p>

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Woman Wants to Ban Mother-in-Law's Non-Potty-Trained Dog from Her Home

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<p>Virginia ChamleeJuly 12, 2025 at 6:06 AM</p>

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<p>woman holding a chihuahua in her lap</p>

<p>A woman says her mother-in-law is bringing her chihuahua with her every time she comes over — and the dog isn't potty-trained</p>

<p>In a post shared to Reddit, the woman writes that the dog is making a mess in her baby's play area</p>

<p>Now, she's debating how to speak to her mother-in-law about the situation</p>

<p>A woman says she's had it with her mother-in-law's insistence on bringing her non-potty-trained chihuahua along on her visits.</p>

<p>In a post shared to Reddit, the anonymous woman writes: "My mother-in-law watches our baby once a week and brings her chihuahua with her when she comes. The past couple of months, I've been figuring out that her dog has been peeing on our carpet and also peeing on one of our baby's play mats."</p>

<p>"I've just been putting up with it and washing the mat in the washing machine after each visit," she writes. "Tonight, I decided to take the blue light to our carpet and noticed pee stains in multiple places throughout our home."</p>

<p>On a recent visit, the woman noticed her mother-in-law instructing the dog to use a potty pad, though it's clear to her that isn't what's happening regularly.</p>

<p>Getty</p>

<p>Chihuahua sitting on couch</p>

<p>"I am nervous to say anything to her because she is a good person, but she is VERY easily offended and I really need her to continue watching our baby," she writes. "My husband also isn't happy that the dog is peeing, but he has not said anything to his mother. Am I wrong to think that it be his place to say something? Am I blowing this out of proportion?"</p>

<p>— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.</p>

<p>Others on Reddit are now weighing in on the situation, with many arguing the husband is the one who should deal with it.</p>

<p>"Your husband should bring up this issue with his mother," writes one commenter. "Because this is a sanitation issue that could very easily impact your baby (especially with the dog peeing on the baby's mats), I would insist the dog wear a belly band when it comes over for a while. The issue can be revisited when the dog is better trained and your child is older to where they are less likely to roll around in dog waste while playing."</p>

<p>Adds another commenter: "You have every right not to allow the dog in your home. However, I'm sorry to say this, but you are going to have to find a new babysitter."</p>

<p>on People</p>

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Woman Wants to Ban Mother-in-Law's Non-Potty-Trained Dog from Her Home

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Gen Xers raised their kids. Now, their own parents are a challenge | Opinion

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  • Gen Xers raised their kids. Now, their own parents are a challenge | Opinion</p>

<p>Meredith O'BrienJuly 11, 2025 at 9:03 PM</p>

<p>A college pal of mine routinely drives across Massachusetts to visit his retired father and bring him cartons of cigarettes purchased in the lower-tax state of New Hampshire to save his fixed-income, widower dad some money.</p>

<p>Another visits her widowed mother-in-law every weekend to help with chores around the house, and even pitches in to help an aunt-in-law with dementia.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, my husband and his two sisters take turns going to their father's apartment every weekend to dole out their bedridden dad's medicine, do his grocery shopping, handle his bills and medical care and make sure his home health care aides have what they need.</p>

<p>I bring my own father his medicine weekly — a rainbow of pills tidily tucked inside a rotating series of pillboxes. I pay his bills, schedule and take him to medical appointments, and run errands for him as he no longer drives. The place I frequent most often, other than my house, is the drugstore.</p>

<p>All these adult children are Generation Xers. All our parents have lost their longtime spouses, and we are attempting to help. That's when we're not fielding questions from our twentysomething children about how to handle adulting, like what to do after you have a fender bender and how to deal with one's health insurer.</p>

<p>Giving support, trying not to anger</p>

<p>All of us have arrived at the stage of our lives where we've become the glue holding the generations together. We host the holiday events. We keep everyone up to date on family news, like the family town crier. This being-the-glue-of-the-family seems to have happened slowly, then all at once. We went from being the ones with the lives built around raising our children and trying to advance our careers to the ones who've added parenting our parents to our to-do lists.</p>

<p>Nearly every conversation winds up becoming a status update on our parents or our nascent adult children as we exchange war stories and engage in gallows humor, similar to what we did decades ago when we were navigating the early days of child-rearing. Our own lives can seem like afterthoughts, which isn't new for the oft-ignored GenX generation.</p>

<p>Yet as we enter this new era of our lives, guidance is sparse. How-to books on raising kids tend to top out at the teenage years. There isn't much guidance on how to give young adult children the support they need while simultaneously respecting their autonomy and trying not to anger them.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, we're doing the same thing with our parents, most of whom are living solo for the first time after decades of marriage. We're trying to give them the support they need while simultaneously respecting their autonomy and trying not to anger them.</p>

<p>Bad habits, falling for scams</p>

<p>It's trickier doing this with your mother or father, who may have developed myriad unhealthy or unwise habits since you left home. Do we refuse to help them obtain unhealthy food? Do we tell them we're not getting them cigarettes or alcohol or intervene if their drinking is out of control?</p>

<p>If we're paying our parents' bills, do we prevent financial damage from buying things they don't need or spending money on scams? New York magazine recently published a long feature about a writer's failed attempts to prevent his widower father from participating in an online romance scam that cost tens of thousands of dollars. Trying to alert his father to the fact that this was a fraudulent website just enraged the 82-year-old and drove a wedge between them.</p>

<p>When I sat down to write my latest novel, "Louie on the Rocks," part of my motivation was to explore the role of an adult child, Lulu, and her widower father, Louie, as they clash over his choices — chiefly, about how Louie is spending his money. Louie firmly believes Lulu should butt out, but Lulu takes him to court to try to seize control over his finances, noting his decisions are affected by his spiraling alcoholism. It doesn't end well.</p>

<p>In my own life, years after our mother died, my brother and I started handling most of our father's finances and caring for his house. There were multitudes of uncomfortable bumps along the way. While my dad thanks us for our assistance, he chafes, naturally, at financial constraints. It no doubt feels insulting and infantilizing to have the people whose diapers you once changed suddenly telling you that you don't need that credit card or giving you only $50 instead of the $100 you requested.</p>

<p>Boomers' dementia, alcohol use</p>

<p>Then there's the dementia issue.</p>

<p>A study from the journal Nature Medicine found that 2 in 5 people older than 55 will develop dementia in their later years. Given the size of the baby boomer generation, the number who'll be diagnosed with dementia is higher than previously thought. The number of cases is expected to double by 2060.</p>

<p>Then, throw in the drinking.</p>

<p>Business Insider recently declared that "Baby Boomers Love Booze." That's underplaying it. "Alcohol use is increasing among adults 65 and older and the size of this population is expanding rapidly," says a report in the medical journal Alcohol, adding that boomers drink more than their predecessors in the Silent Generation.</p>

<p>That means a growing number of Gen Xers and older millennials will probably soon find themselves deeply entrenched in their parents' lives, paying their bills, monitoring their activities (like telling them not to give a credit card number to someone who called claiming to be a grandson who's been arrested and needs bail money) and making sure they're not drinking too much.</p>

<p>Sounds a lot like parenting one's parents, who are likely to rebel just like our teenage children did. Maybe we're the ones who are going to need that drink.</p>

<p>Meredith O'Brien is the author of several books, including the recent novel "Louie on the Rocks." She lives in the Boston area.</p>

<p>Meredith O'Brien</p>

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Gen Xers raised their kids. Now, their own parents are a challenge | Opinion

<p>- Gen Xers raised their kids. Now, their own parents are a challenge | Opinion</p> <p>Meredith O...

Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another story

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  • Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another story</p>

<p>MELISSA GOLDIN July 12, 2025 at 11:14 PM</p>

<p>A volunteer sets up an art installation displaying names and faces of people who have been detained, deported, or sent to offshore camps during ICE raids in Southern California, at Olvera Street Plaza in Los Angeles, on Thursday, July 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)</p>

<p>President Donald Trump has pledged to deport "the worst of the worst." He frequently speaks at public appearances about the countless "dangerous criminals" — among them murderers, rapists and child predators — from around the world he says entered the U.S. illegally under the Biden administration. He promises to expel millions of migrants in the largest deportation program in American history to protect law-abiding citizens from the violent threats he says they pose.</p>

<p>But government data around ongoing detentions tells a different story.</p>

<p>There has been an increase of arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement since Trump began his second term, with reports of raids across the country. Yet the majority of people currently detained by ICE have no criminal convictions. Of those who do, relatively few have been convicted of high-level crimes — a stark contrast to the chilling nightmare Trump describes to support his border security agenda.</p>

<p>"There's a deep disconnect between the rhetoric and the reality," said Ahilan Arulanantham, co-faculty director of the UCLA Law School's Center for Immigration Law and Policy. "This administration, and also in the prior Trump administration, they consistently claim to be going after the worst of the worst and just talk about immigration enforcement as though it is all about going after violent, dangerous people with extensive criminal histories. And yet overwhelmingly, it's people they're targeting for arrest who have no criminal history of any kind."</p>

<p>The latest ICE statistics show that as of June 29, there were 57,861 people detained by ICE, 41,495 — 71.7% — of whom had no criminal convictions. That includes 14,318 people with pending criminal charges and 27,177 who are subject to immigration enforcement, but have no known criminal convictions or pending criminal charges.</p>

<p>Each detainee is assigned a threat level by ICE on a scale of 1 to 3, with one being the highest. Those without a criminal record are classified as having "no ICE threat level." As of June 23, the latest data available, 84% of people detained at 201 facilities nationwide were not given a threat level. Another 7% had been graded as a level 1 threat, 4% were level 2 and 5% were level 3.</p>

<p>"President Trump has justified this immigration agenda in part by making false claims that migrants are driving violent crime in the United States, and that's just simply not true," said Lauren-Brooke Eisen, senior director of the justice program at the Brennan Center for Justice. "There's no research and evidence that supports his claims."</p>

<p>Tricia McLaughlin, an assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, called the assessment that ICE isn't targeting immigrants with a criminal record "false" and said that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has directed ICE "to target the worst of the worst—including gang members, murderers, and rapists." She counted detainees with convictions, as well as those with pending charges, as "criminal illegal aliens."</p>

<p>Nonpublic data obtained by the Cato Institute shows that as of June 14, 65% of the more than 204,000 people processed into the system by ICE since the start of fiscal year 2025, which began Oct. 1, 2024, had no criminal convictions. Of those with convictions, only 6.9% had committed a violent crime, while 53% had committed nonviolent crimes that fell into three main categories — immigration, traffic, or vice crimes.</p>

<p>Total ICE arrests shot up at the end of May after White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller gave the agency a quota of 3,000 arrests a day, up from 650 a day in the first five months of Trump's second term. ICE arrested nearly 30% more people in May than in April, according to the Transactional Records Clearinghouse, or TRAC. That number rose again in June, by another 28%.</p>

<p>The Cato Institute found that between Feb. 8 and May 17, the daily average of "noncriminals" processed into the system ranged from 421 to 454. In the following two weeks at the end of May, that number rose to 678 and then rose to 927 in the period from June 1 through 14.</p>

<p>"What you're seeing is this huge increase in funding to detain people, remove people, enforce immigration laws," Eisen said. "And what we're seeing is that a lot of these people back to sort of the original question you asked, these are not people who are dangerous."</p>

<p>Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, said the administration is intensely focused on rooting out unvetted criminals who are in the country illegally.</p>

<p>"Just this week, the Administration conducted a successful operation rescuing children from labor exploitation at a marijuana facility in California, and continued arresting the worst of the worst – including murderers, pedophiles, gang members, and rapists," she wrote in an email. "Any suggestion that the Administration is not laser focused on these dangerous criminals is flat out wrong."</p>

<p>While most ICE detainees are not convicted criminals, there are detainees who have committed serious crimes. On Friday, the administration released information on five high-level offenders who had been arrested.</p>

<p>During his campaign, Trump highlighted several cases where immigrants in the country illegally were arrested for horrific crimes. Among them: The killing of 22-year-old Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student who was slain last year by a Venezuelan man in the U.S. illegally. Jose Ibarra was found guilty of murder and other crimes in Riley's February 2024 killing and sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Ibarra is seeking a new trial.</p>

<p>Trump in January signed into law the Laken Riley Act, which requires the detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes.</p>

<p>Research has consistently found, however, that immigrants are not driving violent crime in the U.S. and that they actually commit fewer crimes than native-born Americans. A 2023 working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, for example, reported that immigrants for 150 years have had lower incarceration rates than those born in the U.S. In fact, the rates have declined since 1960 — according to the paper, immigrants were 60% less likely to be incarcerated.</p>

<p>Experts say the false rhetoric coming out of the Trump administration creates real harm.</p>

<p>"It makes people in immigrant communities feel targeted and marginalized," Arulanantham said. "It creates more political and social space for hate in all its forms, including hate crime against immigrant communities."</p>

<p>Eisen noted that the impact extends to other communities as well.</p>

<p>"All Americans should want safe and thriving communities and this idea that the president of the United States is making misleading statements about the truth and distorting reality is not the way to deliver public safety," she said.</p>

<p>___</p>

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How the deadliest hours of the devastating Texas floods unfolded

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  • How the deadliest hours of the devastating Texas floods unfolded</p>

<p>Jon GerbergJuly 12, 2025 at 7:00 PM</p>

<p>A Fourth of July flash flood wiped out dozens of lives and wrecked a beloved resort community. (Montinique Monroe for NBC News; Getty Images; Obtained by NBC News)</p>

<p>KERRVILLE, Texas — In the hours before the flood, the Miller girls — Eliza, Genevieve and Birdie — were eating fajitas in the Camp Mystic mess hall and watching counselors act in a "Wicked" skit. There was a dance party in the cabins closest to the Guadalupe River, where the littlest campers bunked. Then it was time for lights out.</p>

<p>Down the river, Lucas Brake and his wife, Irene, had invited Lucas' parents to a cabin for a weekend of fishing and a July 4 barbecue. And 19-year-old Riata Schoepf and her boyfriend were out kayaking on the placid water before heading back to the River Inn Resort.</p>

<p>"The sun was shining like it was just perfect weather," Schoepf said.</p>

<p>But there was a storm coming. The National Weather Service had sent out a warning in the afternoon.</p>

<p>Sometime before midnight, the rain started to fall. Hard. The river swelled and surged over its banks, suddenly rushing with a reckless violence that snapped trees, carried away victims as they slept, swallowed up the cars they fled in and pulled them under as they ran for higher ground. First responders couldn't keep up, and in many cases didn't get there in time. At least 129 people died and 166 are still missing, mostly from Kerr County.</p>

<p>A week after the flood, there are many questions that authorities have refused to answer. How could all these campers, revelers and residents be caught off guard? Why didn't many of them get flash flood alerts? What time did emergency response officials snap into action, and by then was it too late? Why were at least two high-ranking Kerr County officials still asleep when the waters were surging?</p>

<p>Camp Mystic, a summer camp for girls, has stood in a dangerous flood zone for decades. (Google Maps)</p>

<p>The river has been taking lives and flooding homes for a century, and for nearly as long, authorities have discussed how best to monitor the flow and alert people to danger.</p>

<p>Kerr County officials said they would produce an "after-action" report but that it wouldn't be immediate — they're focused on searching for the missing. Just in the past few years, authorities chose not to install a new alert system that included sensors and sirens in part because of the cost. At least 36 children in the county died in the July 4 flood.</p>

<p>"First responders from emergency services throughout Kerr County promptly responded to the recent emergency as the situation unfolded," Sheriff Larry Leitha said at a news conference this week. "This incident will be reviewed. You have my word. When or if necessary, if improvements need to be made, improvements will be made."</p>

<p>In July 1932, after a daytime flood wrecked parts of Camp Mystic and killed seven people elsewhere, a local newspaper noted that it would have been a lot worse if it had happened overnight.</p>

<p>The camp's longtime owner, Richard "Dick" Eastland, who also served as a director of the Upper Guadalupe River Authority, spoke often of the perils of living on the flood plain. "The river is beautiful," he told a reporter in 1990. "But you have to respect it."</p>

<p>What follows is a recounting of how the disaster unfolded in the crucial and deadliest hours of 1 a.m. to 6 a.m. for a dozen people. This report uses firsthand accounts, interviews with parents, official alerts, news reports and videos obtained by NBC News.</p>

<p>Around midnight on July 4, a blast of thunder wakes 10-year-old Lucy Kennedy in her bunk at Camp Mystic. She struggles to fall back asleep with the storm overhead.</p>

<p>She and her bunkmates aren't allowed to have phones, so they don't see the urgent National Weather Service warning that arrives as the rain keeps falling.</p>

<p>Cell service at Camp Mystic is spotty, and it's unclear if anyone there receives the alert.</p>

<p>Around 2 a.m., Lucy hears people outside her bunk hollering for everyone to get out: The river is rising quickly, and the cabin is in danger.</p>

<p>Lucy's counselors tell them to grab blankets and guide them to a nearby recreation hall. The first floor is already taking on water, so the girls gather in a second-floor loft, huddled together in wet pajamas. Told to stay quiet, the girls wait and pray.</p>

<p>They don't see any rescue workers; the camp is left to fend for itself.</p>

<p>The storm wakes Riata Schoepf at the River Inn Resort around 2 a.m. She and her boyfriend have received no alert because the area is a cellphone dead zone. But someone notices the rising water, and her boyfriend's brother swings open the bedroom door and says, "We have to get out. There's a flood coming. Grab your stuff and let's go." Outside, the water is lapping a patio where they sat hours earlier.</p>

<p>They jump in a car, but the road is flooded, and no one can drive out. They wait. The water rises to the cars' tires. Some people get out and start walking to higher ground, but with no first responders in sight, Schoepf and her boyfriend don't know what to do.</p>

<p>The pounding rain wakes up Lorena Guillén, who owns Blue Oak RV Park in Kerrville. She drives to the river's edge at around 2:30 a.m. to check how high it is. She's on alert because she received the earlier flash flood warning and her park is full of people. It's raining, but the water seems fine. After her rounds, she says, she calls the Kerr County Sheriff's Office for an update. They tell her there is no information to share, so Guillén leaves her RV park residents sleeping.</p>

<p>Around the same time, Genevieve Miller's counselor in Bug House at Camp Mystic wakes up first, sees water flooding into the cabin, goes to the office and is told by staff to evacuate. Eastland, the camp's owner, drives Genevieve, 12, and other girls to safer ground — the recreation hall where Lucy and her cabin mates are praying on the balcony.</p>

<p>"It came so very fast," Lisa Miller, Genevieve's mother, later says. "I would assume they thought they had a lot more time than they did."</p>

<p>The Bubble Inn cabin at Camp Mystic is where the youngest campers slept. NBC News has blurred the faces of two girls whose identities could not be independently verified. (Obtained by NBC News)</p>

<p>In Giggle Box, one of the Camp Mystic cabins on the flats nearest to the riverbank, the counselors and staff have trouble opening the doors as the water rises. They break open the windows and start passing girls through. Nine-year-old Birdie Miller and her fellow campers hold hands in a long chain as they wade through rushing water to head to higher ground.</p>

<p>Eastland runs over to give one of the girls her missing shoe. "OK, you girls, be safe," he says, heading to help Bubble Inn, the cabin closest to the water, which houses the 8-year-olds, the littlest at the camp. It is the last they see of him alive; all 13 campers and two counselors are swept away.</p>

<p>Birdie and her bunkmates make a perilous trek to a hilltop, where she spends the night. Lisa Miller's oldest daughter, Eliza, 14, is in a cabin called Cloud Nine on "senior hill," where she is safe. They think they're just weathering a crazy storm; they read books by the constant flashes of lightning. They have no idea what's happening below.</p>

<p>Christian Fell survived by standing on top of a meter box outside his grandmother's home. (Suzanne Gamboa / NBC News)</p>

<p>Christian Fell, 25, is jolted awake by a crack of thunder at around 3 a.m. The river he normally watches from the patio of the historic stone home his grandfather built in Hunt, about 6 miles north of Camp Mystic, is over his ankles and rising fast. Trees and debris are slamming against the house, trapping him inside as the waters rise. He tries calling 911 but is disconnected three times, he says. On one call, he says, the dispatcher tells him to call back when the water is at chin level.</p>

<p>He dives underwater and swims out through a broken window.</p>

<p>Fell tries to climb to the roof, but the gutter snaps off. He instead clings to a meter box mounted on the house, about 7 feet above the ground. He stands on its narrow top for hours, his hands dangerously close to electrical wires. He waits for several hours until the waters recede.</p>

<p>By 3 a.m., the National Weather Service isn't warning of a potential flash flood — the meteorologists say it's already happening. But some key local officials are still asleep.</p>

<p>Around 3:20 a.m., Schoepf and her boyfriend, stuck in their car outside the River Inn Resort, see people fleeing on foot and decide to join them. A wave of water knocks down her boyfriend, but they keep moving and come across a two-story house. Someone throws her a rope of sheets tied together and hoists her out of hip-high water.</p>

<p>Her boyfriend makes it as well, and for nearly an hour they join a group of strangers helping dozens of others, including children and dogs, climb onto the second floor.</p>

<p>Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice is jogging on a river trail at around 3:30 a.m. "Everything was fine," he later says. A half hour later, turning toward home, he notices no signs of rising water.</p>

<p>Lorena Guillén is haunted by the screams she heard in the dark outside her RV park. (Montinique Monroe for NBC News)</p>

<p>Around 3:30 a.m., Guillén, the RV park owner, sees flashing rescue lights and a team trying to get a boat into the river. She joins her husband to check on their campsite. They find trailers tearing up from the ground and plunging into the river. It has been about 45 minutes since her last rounds, when the river seemed calm and the sheriff's office had nothing to report. "It all changed that quickly," she says. "It was horrifying."</p>

<p>Guillén's husband sees a father holding babies in the rushing water and tries to take them from him. But the current overpowers them, and they are gone.</p>

<p>Guillén goes door to door urging her guests to flee. Some run barefoot, barely clothed. In the dark she hears screams, cars honking, cabins crashing against trees.</p>

<p>Thad Heartfield got a desperate call from his son, Aidan, before he disappeared.</p>

<p>Around 4 a.m., Thad Heartfield is awakened at his south Texas home by a phone call from his 22-year-old son, Aidan, who is with his girlfriend and two others at their river cabin in Hunt. Aidan tells his dad that there's 4 inches of water inside the cabin, but the water rises suddenly to about 4 feet. Heartfield urges his son to get out, to drive to the highway. But the water is rushing in so fast, their cars wash away.</p>

<p>Aidan tells his dad he has to help his girlfriend and hands his phone to one of the other girls, who within seconds tells Heartfield his son and the others are gone.</p>

<p>The phone goes dead.</p>

<p>A week later, Heartfield's son is still missing; the friends' bodies have been recovered.</p>

<p>The National Weather Service alerts escalate in urgency, but Kerr County hasn't activated one of its emergency warning systems.</p>

<p>At 4:22 a.m., a volunteer firefighter in Ingram calls a Kerr County Sheriff's Office dispatcher to say that he and his crew are having trouble getting anywhere because of the rising flood, according to audio obtained by NBC affiliate KXAN. He asks, "Is there any way we can send a CodeRed out to our Hunt residents asking them to find higher ground or stay home?" He is referring to a notification system that allows county authorities to send emergency alerts to people who have subscribed.</p>

<p>The dispatcher replies, "We have to get that approved with our supervisor. Just be advised we have the Texas water rescue en route."</p>

<p>More than an hour passes before some residents receive a CodeRed alert; for others, no alert ever arrives.</p>

<p>Sometime after 4 a.m., Leitha, the Kerr County sheriff, is woken up and notified about the flooding. Officials won't say whether the town's emergency manager was awake, or what he and the other county officials were doing in the hours beforehand.</p>

<p>Around 4:45 a.m., Lucas and Irene Brake jump out of bed in their RV near the Guadalupe River and see the roiling water. Lucas calls his brother Robert in Fort Worth and asks him to call their parents, who are staying in a cabin nearby, and tell them to evacuate. Then Lucas opens the door to their RV "and we're neck-deep in the flood. Our motor home is already floating away." He gets his wife and their dogs into their Jeep and moves up to higher ground.</p>

<p>Robert calls their father, waking him, and asks him to help Lucas. Their father gets off the phone, saying: "I'm on my way." But he's in far more trouble.</p>

<p>Minutes after the call, Lucas runs toward his parents' cabin to look for them. But when he gets there, it's gone.</p>

<p>"It was chaos," Irene says. "You see the people in their RVs floating past you but you can't get to them because of how violently the river was flowing."</p>

<p>"All you could hear is the people screaming for help," she says. "You would hear trees snapping and the crush of the tiny cabins or the RVs just crashing into the RVs, just coming apart."</p>

<p>A Kerrville Police Department patrol sergeant is making his way to work between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. when he comes across the rising waters. From his patrol car, the sergeant sees dozens of people on rooftops. He gets on his PA system and tells them to hang on, be strong and that he will get help. According to a police spokesman, the sergeant drives to the nearby home of a detective and tells him, "It's bad. I need you to get your gear on and come find me."</p>

<p>Over the next hour, Kerrville police go door to door, waking people up, "convincing them that, yes, the floodwaters are coming and you need to leave now," the spokesman, Jonathan Lamb, later says. During that time, more than 100 homes are evacuated and 200 people rescued, Lamb says.</p>

<p>A manager of The Hunt Store climbed to its roof and called for help. (Rodolfo Gonzalez / AP)</p>

<p>Courtney Garrison, who lives above and manages The Hunt Store, a market near the banks of the Guadalupe, sees an officer warning people up and down the street at about 5:30 a.m.</p>

<p>Garrison, her daughter and their dog have been on their roof for an hour and she has called 911 four times, asking if someone can send a helicopter or a boat.</p>

<p>"I see you guys," the officer yells out on his bullhorn, but he tells Garrison he is unable to help.</p>

<p>At 4:40 a.m., RickyRay Robertson, a pastor who lives in a cabin on the Guadalupe in Kerrville, is jolted awake by police sirens. Grabbing his gun and his cat Astros, Robertson notices that the river has breached a dam and is cresting a hill behind his cabin. He hurries to his brother's house next door, kicks in the door, wakes him up, helps him into the driveway and heads across the street for his truck. Before he makes it, his brother, who does not walk well, yells for help and Robertson turns around to see the water rising around him.</p>

<p>Robertson dashes back and manages to pull his brother with him to the truck, and they drive off through a neighbor's yard. Not long after, the river washes away Robertson's cabin. He is grateful for the police sirens. "They saved our lives by just waking us up," he says.</p>

<p>The county's first alert finally goes out on social media at about 5:30 a.m.</p>

<p>Around the same time, Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring is awakened by the city manager. "We did not know, we did not know," he says of the flooding. "I wasn't alerted. I had received zero alerts beforehand. They did not come."</p>

<p>Nine-year-old Birdie Miller spends four hours in the pouring rain in her pajamas with her bunkmates on the hillside at Camp Mystic. After dawn, the waters recede enough to walk to the recreation center, where she's reunited with her big sister Genevieve.</p>

<p>The alerts keep coming as the danger shifts downstream.</p>

<p>Counselors start to move the girls from the rec center to a newer part of the camp: Camp Mystic Cypress Lake. It is dry and warm, and there is food and water. The campers and counselors wait for helicopters to arrive. As she flies off with 14 others, Lucy Kennedy looks at the river and the camp she loves. It is ruined.</p>

<p>They land at a nearby high school's football field, where Lucy is carried barefoot because she has given her Crocs to another girl. She is safe, but she knows that many are not. During the nighttime evacuation, she watched a friend get pulled away by the current.</p>

<p>Birdie is the first of the Miller girls to be airlifted out. Her sisters soon follow to safety.</p>

<p>The three Miller girls had just started a new session at Camp Mystic. (Courtesy Lisa Miller)</p>

<p>Schoepf waits as the sun rises to see the damage around the home she is sheltering in with her boyfriend. They decide it's safe to head back to the River Inn, passing demolished homes along the way.</p>

<p>The Blue Oak RV Park was leveled. (Montinique Monroe for NBC News)</p>

<p>There is nothing left of Guillén's RV park. All 28 trailers have been washed away. "Devastated," she says. "It's a nightmare. A complete nightmare."</p>

<p>Kerrville sets up a reunification center at a local Walmart to help family members separated by the floodwaters find each other.</p>

<p>That morning, parents of Camp Mystic campers are panicking. In phone calls and text chains and on social media, they search desperately for news. Lucy's mother, Wynne Kennedy, is a hub. She attended Mystic as a camper and a counselor and knows the staff is trained on how to respond to floods. It's one of the reasons she felt comfortable sending Lucy there. She tries to reassure other parents that their girls are in good hands.</p>

<p>But this flood is so much worse than anything she's seen. Upriver from Camp Mystic, the water has destroyed her home. So while she knows Lucy is with people who would do anything to protect her, she is terrified. And there is nothing she can do but wait.</p>

<p>Robert Brake Jr., left, and his wife, Jennifer, right, came to town to help search for his parents. (Sumiko Moots / NBC News)</p>

<p>By late morning, Lucas and Irene Brake, exhausted, take a break from searching for his parents. They spend the next few days alongside Lucas' brother Robert combing through downed trees and wreckage, searching for their bodies, until finally they are recovered. Robert Brake Sr. was 67, Joni, 66.</p>

<p>Robert says his parents "would be in shock and awe" over the kindness and support from the community over the past week. "I know my mom's looking down and she's amazed."</p>

<p>Robert and Joni Brake were staying in a riverside cabin so they could spend the weekend with one of their sons and his wife. (Courtesy Robert Brake Jr.)</p>

<p>Around noon on July 4, after the longest hours of her life, Kennedy finally hears that Lucy made it out. She finds Lucy at a local elementary school, wrapped in a blanket and holding a donated teddy bear. They hug, and for the rest of the day and night Kennedy can hardly let go. Their house is gone, but at this moment it doesn't matter. She also knows many other families who haven't gotten good news. "I don't know what I did to be so blessed," she says.</p>

<p>Lisa Miller soon learns that her girls have been evacuated as well. It takes time for the magnitude of what happened to sink in. "At first, we were just thankful they were safe," she says. "It all kind of slowly dawned upon us how much our girls had gone through."</p>

<p>With so many dead and missing, Kerr County is still looking for a way forward. (Ashley Landis / AP)</p>

<p>But so many of the other girls didn't make it out, little girls with toothy smiles and French braids and bright eyes. Twins Hanna and Rebecca Lawrence, 8 years old. Mary Kate Jacobe, also 8. Lila Bonner, 9. And everyone who was staying at Bubble Inn, including 8-year-old Linnie McCown and counselor Chloe Childress. Dick Eastland died too, trying to save them.</p>

<p>Jon Gerberg, Suzanne Gamboa and Morgan Chesky reported from Kerr County. Colleen Long reported from Washington, D.C. Jon Schuppe reported from New York.</p>

<p>Note: Flood map data comes from Floodbase. Some emergency alerts and social media posts were shortened.</p>

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How the deadliest hours of the devastating Texas floods unfolded

<p>- How the deadliest hours of the devastating Texas floods unfolded</p> <p>Jon GerbergJuly 12, 2025 ...

 

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