flood – Âé¶ąľ«Ć· America's Education News Source Fri, 11 Jul 2025 15:44:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png flood – Âé¶ąľ«Ć· 32 32 Deadly Texas Flood Destroys Historic Camp Mystic: Photos Reveal What Was Lost /article/deadly-texas-flood-destroys-historic-camp-mystic-photos-reveal-what-was-lost/ Fri, 11 Jul 2025 16:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1017950 For nearly a century, Texas’s Camp Mystic has been a beloved summertime hub of joy for generations of girls across the state.

Located along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas, the all-girls Christian camp hosting presidents’ daughters and for its .

Now, a year shy of their centennial, the institution is at the center of tragedy.

On , flooding across Texas Hill Country more than half  of the campgrounds that span over 700 acres, claiming the of at least 27 campers and counselors. Across six counties, the death toll reached 120, with at least another 160 as of publication.

While the camp had all recent safety inspections, questions remain about whether more could have been done to protect campers and staff ahead of the tragedy.

The collection of images below offers a glimpse into the devastation at Camp Mystic, the heroic rescue efforts of the community and the legacy of the camp.

A view of Camp Mystic on July 5 (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty Images)
A plush toy sits on the ground outside of a cabin at Camp Mystic on July 5 (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty Images)
A Camp Mystic T-shirt was found by a search and rescue volunteer along the Guadalupe River near Ingram, Texas. “I hope I find the person to return their belongings, not to find closure,” he said. (Danielle Villasana/Getty Images)
 A look inside the cabins at Camp Mystic on July 5. (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty Images)
Law enforcement and volunteers searching for missing people near Camp Mystic on July 5. (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty Images)
A Chinook helicopter takes off near Camp Mystic after picking up troops that aided in search and recovery efforts on July 6 in Hunt, Texas. (Ronaldo Schemidt/Getty Images)
A search and recovery worker shines his flashlight through through murky waters near Camp Mystic, looking for remains of victims on July 6 in Hunt, Texas. (Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)
Search and rescue workers on horseback ride next to the Guadalupe River near Camp Mystic on July 7 in Hunt, Texas. (Jim Vondruska/Getty Images).
A wrecked canoe near Camp Mystic sits on the bank of the Guadalupe River on July 7 in Hunt, Texas. (Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)
A life jacket was found the Guadalupe River on July 7. (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu/Getty Images)
Beds, furniture and personal belongings scattered outside flooded cabins at Camp Mystic on July 7. (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu/Getty Images)
Lisa Christina Aguillen (right) reacts after law enforcement officers recover a body near the Guadalupe River on July 6. (Desiree Rios for The Washington Post/Getty Images)
A camp trunk and stuffed animal is loaded onto an ATV along the Guadalupe River on July 7 in Hunt, Texas. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Volunteers organize clothing and other belongings outside cabins at Camp Mystic on July 8. (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Community members write messages in chalk at a vigil on July 6 for missing camper Greta Toranzo, who was found dead on July 8. (Raquel Natalicchio/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

Camp Mystic Legacy in Archives

A pamphlet about Camp Mystic from 1926. The camp was gearing up to celebrate its centennial in 2026.
An archival photo from a Camp Mystic brochure. (Houston Staff Photo/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
Campers in 1988 ()
A camper fishing along the river in 1980 ()
Camp Mystic grounds in 1986
Campers in 1990
Campers arriving in 1990
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Texas Community Unites in Mourning, Prayer for Those Lost and Missing in Floods /article/mourning-in-texas-kerrville-community-unites-for-those-lost-and-still-missing-in-texas-floods/ Thu, 10 Jul 2025 19:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1017907 This article was originally published in

KERRVILLE — A crowd gathered at Antler Stadium on Wednesday night, but they were not there to see the Tivy Antler football team run drills or host rival teams.

Instead, the parents, teachers, students and others who filled the bleachers solemnly looked ahead at the Kerrville Independent School District’s football field. They grappled with a grief caused by a devastating flood that swept away people young and old in the early hours of July Fourth.

As hundreds trickled in for a vigil for the flood’s victims that night, people hugged. Some smiled when they spotted a friend, striking up a conversation. Many cried for the Texas Hill Country, which was struck last Friday by the state’s second-deadliest flood. Among the victims lost to the deadly currents of the Guadalupe River was Reese Zunker, who had coached soccer for 12 years at Tivy High School, home to about 4,700 students.

“Our community was struck with tragedy literally in the darkness,” one speaker said. “But as the sun rose, the light came.”

In the aftermath of the tragedy, the deeply religious Kerr County community turned to gospel Wednesday night. Residents channeled their grief through prayer for the more than 100 lives lost and 161 victims from the region who remain missing.

Community members add flowers to a memorial honoring victims of the flood in Kerrville on Wednesday July 9, 2025.
Community members add flowers to a memorial honoring victims of the flood in Kerrville on July 9, 2025. Credit: Brenda Bazán for The Texas Tribune

Questions remain about whether residents were given enough time to evacuate the areas that flooded, including Camp Mystic, the all-girls summer camp and a beloved tradition at the epicenter of the catastrophe. Twenty-seven girls, the camp confirmed, died, as did its director, Richard “Dick” Eastland.

This act of remembrance, residents said, was their way of coming to terms with the senseless destruction the flood left behind.

“I think it’s a way of moving on,” said Leah Westra, a coalition coordinator for the Hill Country Council of Alcohol and Drug Abuse and mother of three, two of whom attend Tivy. “We move on, not because we forget our grief or forget the tragedy, but because we have to. We get to move on and rebuild.”

Pete Calderón, who sits on the school district’s board of trustees, said he tells his students about what God promises — and what he doesn’t — to quell their grief.

“(God) doesn’t promise that we’re not going to have injury or death or sickness,” he said. “What he does promise is that he’s going to be there for us … and you’ve got to lean on that.”

Scenes of the community’s faith presented themselves repeatedly Wednesday evening. Turning bleachers into pews, mourners sang in worship, with one verse saying: “It’s your breath in our lungs.”

A high schooler had his arm outstretched, his palms up.

Two friends embraced each other, their arms interlocked across different rows of the stadium. Another woman held her toddler tighter. Her son is so young that he can’t quite grasp the magnitude of the death.

People worpship during a Kerr County Blessing at Antler Stadium on Wendsday July 9, 2025 in Kerrville, Texas.
People sing and raise their hands in the air in worship during a vigil at Kerrville’s Antler Stadium on July 9, 2025. Credit: Ronaldo Bolaños/The Texas Tribune

“Peace, peace,” one man whispered to himself.

One girl adjusted her red glasses to wipe away her tears. Every time she did, her cheeks just got damp again.

Many wore blue, the high school’s colors, while others pinned green ribbons to their shirts, the color for Camp Mystic.

For over an hour, through song and Bible verses, Dan Beazley, who stands at about 5’7” tall, held up a wooden cross nearly twice his size. Abigail Smithson, a student at the high school, joined him.

Beazley had driven 24 hours from Michigan with the cross in the bed of his truck. Earlier in the week, he had held the cross up at the site of Camp Mystic while first responders dug through debris looking for survivors.

He brought the cross “to make a little bit of difference, to help them grieve, to bring a little bit of hope,” said Beazley, who added he can’t stop thinking about what victims went through before they passed away.

Community members attend a vigil for the victims of the floods at the Antler Stadium in Kerrville on Wednesday July 9, 2025.
Community members attend a vigil for the victims of the floods on July 9, 2025. Credit: Brenda Bazán for The Texas Tribune

The night ended with footballs and frisbees tossed around, an effort for the community to find some joy. Lively music, laughter and conversation filled the stadium.

“We set an hour to play. There is healing in play and laughter,” said Josh Smithson, the father of Abigail Smithson and a minister with YoungLife. “They were able to let go of some of the heaviness.”

This article originally appeared in is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

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