News

Multiple parts of Central Texas, including Kerr County, were shocked by flash floods Friday when the Guadalupe River rose ...
Aidan Heartfield was on the phone with his dad when their family’s cabin was swept away in the Texas floods. A team is ...
The Department of State Health Services released records Tuesday showing the camp complied with a host of state regulations ...
Two days before deadly Central Texas floods killed at least 27 people at Camp Mystic, a state inspector visited the youth ...
Camp Mystic, the summer haven torn apart by a deadly flood, has been a getaway for girls to make lifelong friends and find ...
Officials with Camp Mystic have confirmed 27 campers and counselors died in the flooding on the Guadalupe River this past ...
The uncertainty about what happened at Mystic comes as local officials have repeatedly dodged questions about who was ...
Camp Mystic, on the banks of the Guadalupe River near Hunt, Texas, has been operated by generations of the same family since the 1930s.
Forty adults have also died. The Christian all-girls camp is located along the Guadalupe River – which rose more than 20 feet in less than two hours overnight into the July Fourth holiday.
The youngest girls at Camp Mystic in Texas were asleep in cabins as little as 225 feet from the river when flash flooding suddenly surged — causing the water to rise 20 feet above flood stage in ...
Camp Mystic, located in Hunt, Texas, was hosting about 750 children this week when heavy rain caused water from the Guadalupe River to rapidly rise in the early morning hours of July 4.
Some 36 hours after the floods, authorities still have not said how many people were missing beyond 27 children from Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp along a river in Kerr County, where most ...