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Camp Mystic has confirmed the deaths of 27 campers and camp counselors in the catastrophic floods on July 4, according to a statement on the camp’s website.
One man in Hunt, stood on a thin, electrical box for hours as the Guadalupe River rose up around him on Friday morning.
Catastrophic flooding in Texas Hill Country resulted in the deaths of at least 82 people, including 27 children and counselors from Camp Mystic, and dozens more are missing as search and rescue ...
Here is where the flash flooding has hit Texas - The Guadalupe River surged to nearly 35 feet on July 4 - rising 20 feet in ...
Flash flood alley is a curved-shaped region about 300 miles long and 50 miles wide in central/south-central Texas, extending ...
Centro San Antonio organized the vigil as a way to remember those lost in the floods and to collect non-monetary donations ...
Camp Mystic is grieving the loss of 27 campers and counselors following the catastrophic flooding on the Guadalupe River. Our ...
Chuck Schumer asked acting Inspector General Roderick Anderson to investigate if recent NWS staff cuts had an impact on the ...
MAJOR DISASTER DECLARATION: The catastrophic flooding struck on Friday, causing a surge of 20 to 26 feet on the Guadalupe ...
Emergency responders continue to search for missing people and local police said efforts have been slowed by "sightseers who ...
The first weather emergency alert sent by the National Weather Service with urgent language instructing people to "seek ...
The National Weather Service issued timely alerts, meteorologists say, but few were listening in the hours before the early morning flash floods.