The week where the wall has a bell
June 22, 2026 · 7:45 AM

The week where the wall has a bell

At Camp Cranium in Pennsylvania, children and young adults with traumatic brain injuries get a week built around access, courage and ordinary summer-camp fun. The story follows the counselors, parents and campers who make the rock wall, archery field and dance floor feel reachable.

The useful kind of bravery

The detail I keep coming back to is not the zipline or the rock wall, though both matter. It is the bell at the top of the wall.
At Camp Victory in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, Camp Cranium brings children and young adults with traumatic brain injuries together for a June week of cabins, archery, swimming, crafts, campfires and a dance under the stars. WVIA's Lydia McFarlane reported from the camp on June 21, describing 25 campers, intense heat, counselors trading fist bumps, and an atmosphere that felt surprisingly peaceful for a place full of activity. 1
Ruby Odhner practices archery during Camp Cranium.
Ruby Odhner learns how to use a bow and arrow during the weeklong program at Camp Victory. Photo by Sarah Hofius Hall / WVIA News, via WVIA.

A place where "I can be me" is practical

Camp Cranium's program page describes its summer camp as a weeklong overnight experience in Millville for children diagnosed with acquired or traumatic brain injury, held at Camp Victory, a fully accessible recreational facility. Campers are matched one-to-one with counselors and can take part in adapted activities including rock-wall climbing, ziplining, swimming, fishing, boating, dance night and campfire songs. 2
WVIA's story gives those program details a human weight. Tony Sadowski, Camp Cranium's executive director since 2024, first arrived as a parent after a speech therapist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia recommended the camp for his son, Bryan. Sadowski told WVIA that Bryan had a brain bleed and hemorrhagic stroke at age 6; now he is a high school graduate preparing to study occupational therapy at Elizabethtown College. 1
Sadowski remembered dropping Bryan off in 2016 as "a relatively shy kid" with physical impairments who was afraid to try many things. By Friday, he said, Bryan had found independence, climbed the rock wall, gone on the zipline, paddled boats and fished with his counselor. "It really does change kids for the better," he told WVIA. 1
The sentence that seems to explain the camp best came from Drew Meyer, Camp Cranium's director of operations. He told WVIA that one of the biggest things he hears from campers is, "I can be me." 1

The wall, the hoist and the cheering

McFarlane's strongest scene happens at the rock wall. Jonathan Blankenship, 15, was a first-time camper after sustaining a traumatic brain injury in a car accident. His doctors had given him two years to live; three years later, WVIA found him making friends and reaching the top of the wall. "I'm healing. It makes me feel good," Jonathan said. 1
Nearby, another camper was lifted from his wheelchair by a hoist while counselors shouted encouragement. He used his arms on the handholds, the hoist supported his body, and when he reached the top and rang the bell, the clearing broke into laughter and applause. Meyer said he had not seen anything the campers could not do "with time and with the drive and with the creativity." 1
Thursday's Camp Cranium schedule included zipline, archery and a dance.
Thursday's schedule at Camp Cranium included time on the zipline, archery and a dance. Photo by Sarah Hofius Hall / WVIA News, via WVIA.

The gift is not only for the campers

Brain injury can make childhood socially narrow. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke defines traumatic brain injury as brain damage caused by an external force, and WVIA cited research connecting traumatic brain injury with isolation and loneliness. 3 1
That is why Bryanna Engleman's quote stays with me. A camper since 2018, she told WVIA that her brain injury followed a hemispherectomy when she was 5. At first, being around so many people like her felt odd. Then it changed her expectation of the world: "It made me think, well, there's actually good people out there." Now 21 and in her last year as a camper, she plans to return as a counselor after a gap year. 1
There is also a quieter kindness here for parents. Sadowski told WVIA that families often move from years of post-trauma vigilance to the strange act of leaving a child at sleepaway camp. He tells parents they need a chance to catch their breath, too. 1
Camp Cranium says donations, grants and fundraisers help keep the camp's cost low and provide financial assistance for families who need it. Its 2026 camp is scheduled for June 8 through June 12, and the site lists ways to volunteer, donate or refer a camper. 4
That is a satisfying place to leave the story: with the people who made the bell reachable. A counselor. A hoist. A week away. A parent allowed, briefly, to breathe.

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