A Texas firefighter saw his wedding plans go under water, thanks to Harvey. But his fiancee will still have a dress to wear to say 'I do.' The dress is the only thing that didn't get destroyed by the hurricane and resulting floodwaters.As the water in Kyle Parry's Beaumont home began to rise Monday, he stuffed the wedding dress in a wardrobe on his way out, hoping it would stay dry.To his surprise -- it did.He found it Thursday, hanging inches from the water, with not a stain on it. Parry's fiancee was thrilled to hear her beloved dress survived the storm."It was a sign that, of all this turmoil, that was the one thing that was supposed to make it," she told the Dallas Morning News. The couple was set to get married next week. But with only the dress, they have postponed the wedding.

A Texas firefighter saw his wedding plans go under water, thanks to Harvey.


But his fiancee will still have a dress to wear to say 'I do.' The dress is the only thing that didn't get destroyed by the hurricane and resulting floodwaters.

As the water in Kyle Parry's Beaumont home began to rise Monday, he stuffed the wedding dress in a wardrobe on his way out, hoping it would stay dry.

To his surprise -- it did.



He found it Thursday, hanging inches from the water, with not a stain on it.

Parry's fiancee was thrilled to hear her beloved dress survived the storm.

"It was a sign that, of all this turmoil, that was the one thing that was supposed to make it," she told the Dallas Morning News.

The couple was set to get married next week. But with only the dress, they have postponed the wedding.