The youngest campers at the scenic site in Kerr County, Texas were sleeping in low-laying cabins just 225 feet from a river which it broke its banks during the early hours of July 4, triggering the deadly floods.
At least five girls from the camp have been confirmed dead, each aged eight or nine, and 11 children are still missing.
Survivor Elinor Lester, 13, described the scene of horror to ABC7. ‘The camp was completely destroyed,’ she said. ‘A helicopter landed and started taking people away. It was really scary.’
At least 67 people have been killed, including 21 children, after the Guadalupe River rose more than 26 feet in just 45 minutes, sending a wall of water over several communities in Kerr County, including the campsite.
The National Weather Service escalated the alert to a flash flood warning at 1am Friday, then a more serious Flash Flood Emergency by 4.30am – but by this stage water was already pouring into families’ homes.
It comes after the Trump administration made major cuts to federal funding, impacting agencies like FEMA which lead the response to natural disasters.
A flood watch remains in place for many of the worst-hit areas of central Texas through Sunday, including Kerrville County where the majority of the deaths have been recorded. Forecasters have warned that more rain is on the way.
The five girls who have been confirmed dead at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas have been named and pictured, as eleven remain missing.
Their beloved director of Camp Mystic, Richard ‘Dick’ Eastland, 70, also died while trying to save girls as a month’s worth of rain dropped in a matter of minutes.
Eight-year-olds Renee Smajstrla, Sarah Marsh, Eloise Peck were confirmed among the dead, along with Janie Hunt, Lila Bonner, who were both nine.
Youngest girls at Camp Mystic were just feet from the river when it broke its banks
The youngest campers at the scenic site in Kerr County, Texas were sleeping in cabins just 225 feet from the Guadalupe River when it broke its banks at around 4am on the Fourth of July.
The camp’s younger attendees slept on low-laying ‘flats’ whereas the older girls’ cabins are on higher ground, about 600 feet from the water.
This meant that when the banks broke and water rushed into the camp, the youngest girls were hit by the deluge first.
The majority of the missing girls are from the camp’s younger cohort.
At least five girls from the camp have been confirmed dead, each aged eight or nine, and 11 children are still missing. One counselor is missing.
Survivor Elinor Lester, 13, described the scene of horror to ABC7. ‘The camp was completely destroyed,’ she said. ‘A helicopter landed and started taking people away. It was really scary.’
Former President George W Bush speaks out
Referring to his wife, the former US President and Texas Governor wrote: ‘Laura and I are holding up our fellow Texans who are hurting.
‘We are heartbroken by the loss of life and the agony so many are feeling.’
His wife once worked as a counselor at Camp Mystic, according to Texas Monthly.
Comedian Rosie O’Donnell blames Trump for Texas flood deaths
Speaking from her home in Dublin, Ireland, O’Donnell placed the blame for the flooding squarely on the president’s shoulders.
‘What a horror story in Texas. The flash floods in Texas, the Guadalupe River. Fifty-one dead, more missing – children, at a camp,’ she said, speaking on TikTok.
‘When the president guts all of the early warning systems and the weather forecast abilities of the government, these are the results that we’re going to start to see on a daily basis.
‘Because he’s put this country in so much danger by his horrible, horrible decisions and this ridiculously immoral bill that he just signed into law… people will die as a result, and they’ve started already. Shame on him.’
O’Donnell moved from the USA to Ireland shortly after Trump was elected for a second term, saying she could not stand to live in Trump’s America.
Houston Mayor’s office apologizes for a former employee’s ‘deeply inappropriate’ post
Houston Mayor John Whitmire issued an apology statement after an insensitive TikTok video by an outgoing employee about the Texas floods was blasted online.
The former City of Houston employee identified on social media as Sade Perkins, accused the Camp Mystic retreat of being ‘whites-only’ and implied that people should not care about the search for the missing girls as much because of this.
‘I know I’m probably going to get canceled for this,’ she said in the video, ‘Camp Mystic is a whites-only, girls Christian camp’.
‘I think that context needs to be said in this matter,’ she added. ‘This is no shade to the girls, I hope they all get found…
‘But they want you to have sympathy for these people, they want you to get out of your bed and to come out of your home and to go find these people… meanwhile they (the government) are deporting your family members.’
Whitmire condemned the comments as ‘deeply inappropriate’.
‘The comments shared on social media are deeply inappropriate and have no place in decent society, especially as families grieve the confirmed deaths and the ongoing search for the missing,’ he said in the statement.
‘The individual who made these statements is not a City of Houston employee. She was appointed to the City’s Food Insecurity Board by former Mayor Sylvester Turner in 2024, and her term expired in January 2025.’
Whitmire added that he has ‘no plans to reappoint her’ and the city is ‘taking immediate steps to remove her permanently from the board’.
Texas resident recalls ‘horrible’ moment he found dead girl
Hunt resident Robert Modgling said he was part of a search effort for survivors on the morning of July 4.
‘We were looking for survivors all morning long,’ Modgling, 55, told the New York Times.
‘There’s a handful of people that were rescued initially, and after that there just weren’t any. That part’s over.’
He recalled the ‘horrible’ moment he found the body of a girl, aged around seven, pinned to a tree by the floodwater.
‘I’ve got a daughter who’s about that age,’ he said. Police took custody of the girl’s body, he added.
Ivanka Trump speaks out about Texas floods
Trump said that ‘as a mother’ her ‘soul aches’ for the families who have lost children in the floods. The death toll, currently at 67, includes 21 children.
The president’s daughter also praised the first responders for displaying ‘breathtaking courage’ and camp counselors who tried their best to save the young girls.
‘To the sweet souls we’ve lost – may you rest in eternal peace, your spirits carried gently by love and remembrance,’ Trump wrote. ‘You will never be forgotten’.
Photos from the devastation in Texas
Barack Obama speaks out for flood victims
Obama said: ‘The flash flooding in Central Texas is absolutely heartbreaking. Michelle and I are praying for everyone who has lost a loved one or is waiting for news — especially the parents.
‘And we’re grateful to the first responders and rescue teams working around the clock to help.’
Texas official avoids questions at press conference
Victims of the flash floods wrecking havoc on Central Texas are infuriated as local officials blame the National Weather Service (NWS) for failing to warn communities of the dire threat before it was too late.
Rescue teams are frantically searching for missing victims, including 11 girls and a counselor who were at Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp along the river in Kerr County, when tragedy struck.
As search, rescue and recover efforts are underway – with Donald Trump signing a ‘major disaster declaration’ to support first responders – local officials have accused the NWS of rolling out warnings too late, especially in Kerr County where the devastation has been the greatest.
Death toll rises to 67
As of 1pm. Sunday, 67 people had been recorded dead in the floods, including 21 children, mostly concentrated in Kerr County.
Texas flood survivor shares harrowing experience
Sunday photographs lay bare the devastation as residents pick through the debris
Meteorologists warn of more misery on the way for flood-struck Kerr County
The National Weather Service has extended a flood watch for the Kerr County region until 7pm on Sunday as heavy rain continues.
Meteorologists said the warning covers parts of Hill Country, the Interstate 35 corridor and some areas just east of this region.
Another flood watch is in place for Johnson and Tarrant counties, including the Fort Worth metro area, until 1.30pm.
Texas’s Division of Emergency Management predicted the number of dead as a result of catastrophic flooding in Kerrville would top 100.
In an email sent out Saturday, the state disaster office told partners the number of dead would surpass 100, two different sources confirmed to the Daily Mail.
‘Our state assets and local partners are continuing to search for live victims,’ the head of TDEM W. Nim Kidd told reporters at a press conference Saturday.
‘Our hope and prayer is that there is still people alive that are out there.’
As of Sunday morning, 59 had been confirmed dead, and another 12 campers missing.
Of the dead, 38 are adults and 21 are children, local officials said.
President Donald Trump reacts to Texas flooding on Fourth of July: ‘It’s shocking’
Breaking:Donald Trump signs a ‘major disaster declaration’ for the Texas floods
The declaration comes amid a swirl of criticism of the Trump administration for making major cuts to federal funding, impacting agencies like FEMA which lead the response to natural disasters.
‘I just signed a Major Disaster Declaration for Kerr County, Texas, to ensure that our Brave First Responders immediately have the resources they need,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social.
‘These families are enduring an unimaginable tragedy, with many lives lost, and many still missing.
‘The Trump Administration continues to work closely with State and Local Leaders.
‘Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem was on the ground yesterday with Governor Greg Abbott, who is working hard to help the people of his Great State.
‘Our incredible U.S. Coast Guard, together with State First Responders, have saved more than 850 lives. GOD BLESS THE FAMILIES, AND GOD BLESS TEXAS!’
Death toll rises to 59
As of 9 a.m. Sunday, 59 people had been recorded dead in the floods in Kerr County, including 21 children, Sheriff Larry Leitha said at a news conference.
Texans describe clinging to trees to survive
In Ingram, Erin Burgess woke to thunder and rain in the middle of the night. Just 20 minutes later, water was pouring into her home, she said. She described an agonizing hour clinging to a tree with her teen son.
‘My son and I floated to a tree where we hung onto it, and my boyfriend and my dog floated away. He was lost for a while, but we found them,’ she said.
July Fourth visitors may not be included in the death toll
The hills along the Guadalupe River in central Texas are dotted with century-old youth camps and campgrounds where generations of families have come to swim and enjoy the outdoors.
The area is especially popular around the July Fourth holiday, making it more difficult to know how many are missing.
‘We don’t even want to begin to estimate at this time,’ Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice said earlier.
Texas Governor declares Sunday a ‘day of prayer’ for the flood victims
‘I urge every Texan to join me in prayer this Sunday — for the lives lost, for those still missing, for the recovery of our communities, and for the safety of those on the front lines,’ Greg Abbott said in a statement.
Is FEMA responding to the Texas floods?
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has said she has ‘activated US Coast Guard and FEMA resources’ to help those impacted by the Texas floods.
The director of Camp Mystic was killed while trying to save girls from the horrific flooding that swept through the Texas summer camp.
Richard ‘Dick’ Eastland, 70, was killed while trying to rescue campers from the rushing waters, reported KSAT.
His nephew, Gardner Eastland, confirmed the death in a Facebook post on Saturday. Eastland’s wife, Tweety, was found safe at their home, according to The Kerrville Daily Times.
Twenty-seven girls are missing from Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, and five of their fellow campers have died after the rushing waters destroyed the all-girls private Christian summer camp.
Texas man describes narrowly escaping Airbnb as it flooded
Ricky Gonzalez told CNN about the moment he and his friends only just managed to escape the Airbnb where they were spending their Fourth of July weekend.
‘Some of us don’t know how to swim. The water was almost 30 feet deep. I can’t swim personally,’ he said.
‘We made sure all the floaties were inflated, air mattresses, coolers, getting everything ready, just in case that we need to, you know — survive.
Gonzalez added that he was FaceTiming his sister at the time, ‘basically giving my last goodbye’.
He said that at one moment, ‘it crossed my mind that some of us aren’t going to make it out alive’.
‘In my mind, I was just thinking, “Well, I might see some of my friends pass away this morning,”‘ Gonzalez said.
Luckily, a family took the group in, gave them food and drove them to the airport.
Republican Congressional candidate claims floods are ‘fake’
Georgia-based Republican Congressional candidate Kandiss Taylor has claimed the floods were ‘fake’ in a bizarre social media post.
‘Fake weather. Fake hurricanes. Fake flooding. Fake. Fake. Fake,’ Taylor wrote on X on Saturday, the day after the floods deluged central Texas.
She later back-pedaled after facing criticism, claiming she ‘wasn’t talking about Texas’ and was instead ‘referring to legislation being proposed due to weather modification’.
Watch the rise of the Texas river which caused mass flooding
Shocking images show the flood aftermath
Search continues at Camp Mystic for missing girls
Dozens of children are still missing from Camp Mystic, where an all-girls Christian school was staying over when the floods hit.
Dallas megachurch where George Bush is a member issues plea for donations
Highland Park United Methodist Church, where former President and Texas governor George Bush used to pray, has issued a statement.
‘The situation unfolding in the Texas Hill Country is deeply heartbreaking—but even in the midst of such sorrow and uncertainty, we hold on to hope and the promise that God is near to those who suffer,’ the church said in a message to followers.
‘This crisis affects many in our HPUMC family and our local Park Cities community, including generations of women and families touched by Camp Mystic.
‘One of the girls unaccounted for, Hadley Hanna, is a part of our church family. Please pray for her safety and for her parents, Doug and Carrie, along with her two sisters.
‘In times like these, it’s natural to feel a wave of emotion—grief, confusion, fear. Yet as followers of Jesus Christ, we trust that we are never alone in our sorrow.
‘You can help these families and others affected by the flooding in Central Texas by donating online. We are currently working with partners to assess the greatest needs.I hope you’ll join us in worship tomorrow.’
Where is the Texas floodzone?
The Guadalupe River, which runs through several towns around 100 miles south-west of Austin, broke its banks on July Fourth, causing the monster floods.
Communities including Kerrville and Ingram have been devastated by the deluge, and dozens of children who were camping at nearby Camp Mystic are still missing.
Pope Leo XIV is praying for Texas
The Peruvian-American Pope offered his ‘sincere condolences’ and prayers for the families in central Texas, including 27 children who are still missing from an all-girls Christian summer camp located along the river which burst its banks.
‘I would like to express sincere condolences to all the families who have lost loved ones – in particular their daughters who were at summer camp – in the disaster caused by the flooding of the Guadalupe River in Texas in the United States,’ he said during his Sunday Angelus prayer at the Vatican.
‘We pray for them,’ he added.
Meteorologists warn more flooding could be on the way for the worst-hit county
The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch for several counties including Kerrville County in Texas, which has seen the worst of the flooding so far.
Meteorologists have warned that ‘flooding caused by excessive rainfall is possible’ in the region until 1pm on Sunday.
Officials have predicted another two to four inches will fall on average over the area, with up to 10 inches possible in the worst-hit regions.
Blame game begins as heartbroken residents question why they weren’t warned sooner
The National Weather Service escalated the alert to a flash flood warning at 1am Friday, followed by a more serious Flash Flood Emergency by 4.30am.
But by this point, water was already pouring into families’ homes.
Many Texans have blamed the slow updates as part of the reason at least 52 people have lost their lives and dozens remain missing.
The National Weather Service fired around 600 people in recent months as part of Donald Trump’s sweeping cuts to federal services.
It had recently begun the process of hiring 100 new employees.
Trump has also proposed cuts to FEMA and NOAA, federal agencies which conduct climate research and help prepare states for natural disasters.
Texas floods mapped out
Texas Governor shocked and horrified by the extent of the flood damage
Greg Abbott described a scene of pure horror on Saturday as he visited Camp Mystic.
The scenic site was at the epicenter of the flooding, and dozens of children were camping there when the deluge struck.
Beloved soccer coach and wife among the dead
Reece Zunker and his wife Paula are among those who died in the devastating floods, and their two young children are still missing.
The couple’s family and local soccer team confirmed their deaths on social media, while one relative said their house was spotted ‘floating down the Guadalupe River’.
Tivy Boys Soccer team paid tribute to their coach in a Facebook post, saying he ‘rebuilt the soccer program and left a legacy’.
‘His passion for his players, students, co-workers, community and his family will never be forgotten,’ the team wrote.
Dozens of people commented on the post to share the ‘incredible’ impact he had on their lives.
Texas flooding death toll climbs to 52
Officials have said 52 people have been confirmed dead, including 15 children, since the deluge began in central Texas on Thursday.
The majority of those who died were in Kerrville County, where the Guadalupe River broke its banks in the early hours of the Fourth of July.
Rescuers were continuing to comb the river for dozens of missing people on Sunday. The death toll is expected to rise.
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Haunting Camp Mystic cabin layout caused Texas flooding to sweep away youngest girls first: Live updates