Texas flooding death toll rises to 27; search for Camp Mystic campers

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The death toll has risen to 27 after flooding rains rapidly overwhelmed the Guadalupe River in Texas on Friday, prompting a frantic and ongoing rescue effort that continued through the night and into Saturday.

The dead include 18 adults and nine children, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said at a Saturday morning news conference. The toll rose from 24, reported Friday night. Authorities didn’t release further information about the victims as they continue to work to identify them.

Parents were desperate for news about campers who remain missing from Camp Mystic, a Christian girls camp at the river’s edge. As of Saturday morning, there were 27 missing campers from the camp, said Kerrville City Manager Manager Dalton Rice.

The camp is located in central Texas’ Kerr County, about 60 miles northwest of San Antonio. A few miles away along the river, another girls’ camp said its director was killed in the flooding. The Heart O’ the Hills Camp said it was not in session and most people who were at camp when flooding hit have been accounted for, but camp officials received word that Director Jane Ragsdale had died.

“We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful,” the camp said on its website.

There is an unknown number of people missing, Rice said, adding that officials can’t begin to estimate true numbers because there may be an untold number of people visiting the region on vacation.

Five of the confirmed victims are from Harris County, where Houston is located, said Harris County Judge Linda Hidalgo: “All of Texas is impacted by this tragic event.”

A “24/7” rescue effort was underway, Gov. Greg Abbott said at a news conference Friday evening. Over 200 people were rescued from the floodwaters, said Maj. Gen. Thomas M. Suelzer, the commander of the Texas National Guard.

Abbott shared a video to social media of a responder dangling from a helicopter to rescue someone stranded in a tree with floodwaters below.

“Rescue teams worked throughout the night and will continue until we find all our citizens,” the Kerrville Police Department said Saturday morning.

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told reporters Friday that his office has been in contact with the White House multiple times. President Donald Trump told state officials “whatever we need, we will have,” Patrick said.

More than 750 girls were at Camp Mystic in Texas Hill Country when heavy rains and flooding hit the region Friday, July 4. The private nondenominational Christian camp, founded in 1926, is located along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, one of 15 counties covered in Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s disaster declaration.

Flash flooding caused river waters to increase 29 feet rapidly near the camp, officials said. As of Saturday, July 5, there were 27 campers among the missing.

Camp Mystic for Girls was founded by Edward “Doc” Stewart, who was the football and men’s basketball coach at the University of Texas, according to an Internet Archive’s capture of the camp’s website (much of the site was overwhelmed with traffic on Saturday).

The camp has been in operation since then. However, during World War II it served as a “rehabilitation and recovery camp for army air corps veterans,” according to the site.

Mike Snider

As rescuers continue their search for missing people on Saturday, forecasters at the National Weather Service said the threat of catastrophic flooding and heavy rainfall was not yet over. That’s because the system dumping rain over central Texas has slowed as it crawls over the state.

The weather service in Austin and San Antonio said a flood watch was in effect in the region until at least 7 p.m. local time on Saturday. Between 2 and 4 inches of additional rain are expected, with isolated amounts up to 10 inches, the weather service said.

“It is very difficult to pinpoint where exactly the isolated heavy amounts will occur in this pattern,” the weather service said, warning people to pay attention to the weather.

The danger has extended to Travis, Williamson and Burnet counties, where very dangerous flash flooding is ongoing Saturday morning. Between 5 and 12 inches of rainfall has fallen there, the weather service said, calling it a “Particularly Dangerous Situation with life-threatening flash flooding.”

A flood that came with terrifying swiftness

The flooding began sometime after 4:00 a.m., when extreme rains of as much as 12 inches an hour hit, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said in a press conference Friday afternoon.

The National Weather Service had issued a flood watch for parts of south-central Texas, including Kerr County, on Thursday. It warned that a slow-moving system could potentially bring major storms to the area.

The rain that fell was even more intense.

At 2:03 a.m. the National Weather service issued its fifth warning of the evening, each of which had been more strident than the last.

This one said “This is a PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION. SEEK HIGHER GROUND NOW! Life threatening flash flooding of low water crossings, small creeks and streams, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses.”

Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice said he had been jogging along the Guadalupe River trail at 3:30 a.m. and saw only light rain and no signs of flooding.

By 5:00 a.m. officials were beginning to get phone calls, and he and the area fire chief went to a local park to survey the scene.

“Within an hour and a half, [the river] had already risen over 25 feet,” Rice said. “Within a matter of minutes it was up to 29 feet.”

Meteorologist Matthew Cappucci explained in a post on X that rainfall in the area totaled over 10 inches, but “annual rainfall for this region is about 28-32 inches.”

“Imagine 4 months’ worth of rain falling in a 6-hour window,” he said.

The stretch of the Guadalupe River near Bergheim, Texas, located about 35 miles north of San Antonio “rose 40 FEET IN 3 HOURS,” he added.

‒ Doyle Rice and Elizabeth Weise

In San Angelo, about 150 miles from Kerrville in the central part of the state, local officials said the northeast area of the city was the hardest hit. As of late July 4, officials were working to search for one missing person, a city government Facebook post said.

The PaulAnn Baptist Church had temporary shelter available to residents. Meanwhile, a disaster relief fund opened through the nonprofit San Angelo Area Foundation to help people affected by the storm. The United Way of the Concho Valley was also accepting donations for nonperishable foods, clothes and water at Concho Valley Turning Point’s warehouse.

“We couldn’t be more thankful for everyone who has showed up to be a hand up to our neighbors,” the local United Way said in a Facebook post.

– Eduardo Cuevas

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