When Carrie Underwood heard about the Texas flood that took over 110 lives—including 27 girls at summer camp—she said it felt like the air disappeared. “I couldn’t breathe,” she whispered, crying. But she didn’t just cry. She quietly gave $650,000 and paid for apartments so families had a roof again. Then she sang. No makeup, no lights—just her and a raw, one-take version of How Great Thou Art. “Every dollar this earns goes to Texas,” she wrote. The video exploded online—not because it was perfect, but because it was real. People said they couldn’t get through the first chorus without tears.

When news broke of the devastating flood that swept through Ingram, Texas, stealing more than 110 lives — including 27 little girls at a summer camp — the nation mourned. But for Carrie Underwood, the grief …

When Carrie Underwood heard about the Texas flood that took over 110 lives—including 27 girls at summer camp—she said it felt like the air disappeared. “I couldn’t breathe,” she whispered, crying. But she didn’t just cry. She quietly gave $650,000 and paid for apartments so families had a roof again. Then she sang. No makeup, no lights—just her and a raw, one-take version of How Great Thou Art. “Every dollar this earns goes to Texas,” she wrote. The video exploded online—not because it was perfect, but because it was real. People said they couldn’t get through the first chorus without tears. Read More