“FOR OUR GIRLS”: Miranda Lambert’s Texas Tribute with Reba and Lainey Leaves Families in Tears After Devastating Flood Claims 27 Campers
She was born and raised in East Texas — and when tragedy hit her home state, Miranda Lambert did what Texans do best: She showed up. With heart. With grit. And with a promise.
After a catastrophic flash flood swept through the Texas Hill Country, claiming the lives of 104 people, including 27 young girls at a Christian summer camp near Ingram, the country superstar could barely speak through her tears.
“They were babies,” she said, wiping her eyes during a backstage interview. “I’m a proud Texan — and right now, my state is hurting like hell.”
The Numbers Broke a Nation
The July 4th weekend should have been full of sparklers and songs. But nature had other plans. More than 12 inches of rain fell in under 6 hours, triggering a deadly wall of water that ripped through cabins, trails, and trees, destroying Camp Koinonia, a girls’ summer retreat tucked in the hills.
Twenty-seven campers — all girls, all under 15 — were swept away. The youngest was just 8 years old.
Entire families were left with empty beds and shattered hearts. And when Miranda Lambert heard their names… she didn’t hesitate.
$300,000 for Relief — and Every Dollar to Rebuild
Within 24 hours of the tragedy, Miranda donated $300,000 of her own money to the Texas Disaster Relief Fund, specifically earmarked for families of the 27 girls and to help restore community infrastructure lost in the flood.
But then came something even more powerful.
Miranda had just finished recording a new song with Reba McEntire and Lainey Wilson, a fiery, all-women anthem called “Trailblazer.” But after the flood, the trio made a bold decision:
“Every single penny from this song,” Miranda announced, “will go to Texas. Every stream. Every download. Every cent.”
A Song for the Girls Who Never Got to Grow Up
The timing couldn’t have been more meaningful. Trailblazer, originally written as a celebration of strong women across generations, suddenly became something else entirely — a tribute to the little girls who would now never get the chance to blaze their own trail.
Lambert rewrote one of the final verses just days after the flood:
“Some boots don’t get to make their mark / Some hearts burn out before they spark / But oh, how bright they would’ve shined…”
And when the trio performed the song acoustically on July 6 in a candlelit tribute at Gruene Hall, with 27 empty pink chairs behind them on stage — one for each girl — the room was silent, except for sobs.
What Miranda Sent the Parents Tore the Nation’s Heart in Two
But what truly devastated — and comforted — grieving families was what Miranda personally sent them afterward.
Each family received a box wrapped in denim cloth and twine. Inside was a small handmade leather journal, a pressed bluebonnet flower (Texas’ state flower), and a message written in Miranda’s unmistakable cursive:
“She mattered. Her smile, her laugh, her name — they matter. We wrote this song for her. Not just the trail she walked, but the one she should’ve gotten to ride.”
At the end of the note, one more line:
“From one Texas girl to another — I’ll carry her story in every song I sing.”
A State in Grief, a Nation Listening
This wasn’t just celebrity charity. This was home. For Miranda Lambert — a small-town girl from Lindale, Texas — the pain was deeply personal.
“I grew up riding past flood signs. I never thought one would end like this,” she said through tears at the memorial. “But these girls — their names, their dreams — they won’t wash away.”
Reba McEntire, a fellow Oklahoma-born legend, added:
“We’ve seen storms, but we’ve never seen heart like this. Miranda put her soul into that song — and she put every one of those girls in there, too.”
“Trailblazer” Isn’t Just a Song Anymore — It’s a Promise
Since its release, “Trailblazer” has soared to No. 1 on iTunes and is trending on Spotify’s Global Country chart — but none of the artists will touch a dime. All proceeds go straight to Texas Rebuilds, a coalition of relief efforts for families and communities devastated by the flood.
And at each stop on her tour, Miranda ends her show the same way:
She raises her mic, asks the audience to hold up their phone flashlights, and whispers:
“For the 27. Light the trail they never got to walk.”
Rest in peace, girls.
You were trailblazers, too. And now, the world will never forget your names.