Who Are The Victims In The Central Texas Floods?

Eight-year-old girls at sleep-away camp, some for the first time. Out-of-town families spanning generations, crammed into recreational vehicles to relax by a river in Texas Hill Country. Local residents, traveling to or from work, or simply sleeping at home.

In the predawn inkiness of Independence Day, the rains came, and the waters rose. And rose. And rose. By Wednesday morning, at least 119 people had died from the Guadalupe River pouring over its banks. Many perished in the dark, in raging floodwaters, as they were swept out of cars, cabins, houses and trailers. The disaster ranks as one of the deadliest for children in the United States in recent decades.

Among the dead: at least two dozen girls and staff members at a storied Christian summer camp, a 23-year-old police officer and his parents camping in their R.V., a 62-year-old woman driving to her job at Walmart.

And there will be more. As of Wednesday morning, more than 161 people were missing from one county alone — Kerr — northwest of San Antonio, according to Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas.

Stories are emerging about some of the victims, as identified by The New York Times through interviews with families, school officials, church leaders and official statements.

The Times will continue to update this page with glimpses into the lives of the victims of the Texas floods.

Campers and Vacationers

People have long come to Texas Hill Country to boat and fly fish in tranquil waters teeming with largemouth bass and catfish, and hike rugged terrain with views of limestone canyons that are surrounded by wildflowers and cypress and pecan trees. Visitors browse antique shops and wineries, or check out a century-old rodeo, and look for gray foxes, armadillos and white-tailed deer. This bucolic region is also known as Flash Flood Alley.

  • Jeff Wilson, 55

    He was a beloved high school teacher who would often bolt out of his classroom on Friday afternoons so he and his wife could take Shiloh, their son, to rodeo competitions.

  • Blair Harber, 13, 
    and 
    Brooke Harber, 11

  • Katheryn Eads, 52

    “She was an incredible wife, daughter, mother, grandmother and person who spent her life helping kids,” Victoria Eads, her daughter, wrote in an email. Her mother helped children in the foster care system when she worked in early education as a psychologist. She also helped young people during her time as a college professor, her daughter wrote.

  • Bobby Martin, 46, 
    and 
    Amanda Martin, 44

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Bailey Martin, 23

    via Odessa Police Department

    Mr. Martin, the son of Bobby and Amanda Martin and an officer with the Odessa Police Department, was camping with his parents when the floods hit.

  • Reece Zunker, 36, 
    and 
    Paula Joe Zunker, 35

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

    Mr. Zunker was the boys’ soccer coach at Tivy High School in Kerrville; Ms. Zunker had recently stepped back from teaching English in the same district. The soccer team at the school credited Mr. Zunker as someone who “rebuilt the soccer program and left a legacy.”

  • Jake Moeller, 38, 
    and 
    Megan Moeller , 33

  • Mollie Schaffer, 76

  • Joyce Catherine Badon, 21

    via Mackenzie Cahill-Hodulik

    Ms. Badon, who was from Beaumont, was staying with Reese Manchaca and other friends at a house in Hunt.

  • Reese Manchaca, 21

    via Mackenzie Cahill-Hodulik

    Ms. Manchaca was a student at the University of Texas at San Antonio.

  • Tanya Ramsey, 46

    Ms. Ramsey, who was from Lewisville, northwest of Dallas, was camping in her R.V.

  • Cindy Rushing, 53, 
    and 
    James Rushing, 64

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

    The Rushings, who were from Sulphur Springs in East Texas, were camping in their R.V.

  • Julia Anderson Burgess, 39, 
    and 
    John L. Burgess IV, 39

    The Burgesses were camping with their young sons, while their daughter was at a nearby camp. Mr. Burgess was a financial adviser, Mrs. Burgess an elementary school teacher. In a statement, the Liberty ISD Education Foundation, where Mrs. Burgess had worked since 2019, saluted “her bubbly personality, radiant smile and deep love for her students.” Their daughter is safe.

Local Residents

Some who died were retired and had lived in these parts for years. Others were newcomers, just starting jobs and putting down roots. They were going about their routines on the Fourth of July.

  • Tanya Burwick, 62

    Ms. Burwick was driving to her job at a Walmart in San Angelo when her vehicle was caught in rising floodwaters, according to her son, Zac Burwick. She lived in Blackwell, about 48 miles north of San Angelo. “She had a heart of gold,” Mr. Burwick said. “She never knew a stranger and loved everybody that was around her.”

  • Julian Ryan, 27

  • Preston Prince, 22

  • Kaitlyn Swallow, 22

  • Sherry Richardson, 64

    Ms. Richardson moved to a small cabin along the Little Creek river in Liberty Hill three years ago, right behind a care center for people with disabilities where she worked. She is survived by two daughters and five grandchildren. She loved to crochet, and her daughter, Deliah Greenslet, said that items Ms. Richardson made for her family — baby blankets, hats, tapestries — are some of the only items she has left to remember her mother by.

  • Clayton Meadows, 29

  • Braxton Jarmon

  • Sally Sample Graves, 91

    Ms. Graves lived in Ingram, in Kerr County, according to an obituary notice. She and her late husband had two children, 10 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren.

  • Betty West, 84

    Ms. West had worked for decades as an electronics inspector at Texas Instruments. The night before she died, Ms. West’s daughters said, family members had driven her to the family’s cemetery plot to show her some new lighting on one grave. She approved, telling them she would like lights on her own grave when her time came. She also wanted “Bridge Over Troubled Water” played at her funeral.

  • Lee Brizendine, 85

    Mr. Brizendine was a Navy veteran who for many years worked as a nurse at Austin State Hospital, a psychiatric hospital, before retiring. When he wasn’t working, several of his friends said, he liked to go country-western dancing. He also loved tinkering with clocks and could repair anything from vintage grandfather clocks to newer wristwatches, his friends said.

  • William Venus, 57

    Mr. Venus, who served in the Army for 33 years, delivered medication to hospitals and nursing homes. His son William Venus Jr. live-streamed the search for him on Facebook, drawing residents to help. Searchers found his body on Monday, the son said.

  • Holly Frizzell, 72

    Ms. Frizzell, who lived in the Casa Bonita subdivision in Hunt, once owned a clothing boutique in Abilene. After her late husband was diagnosed with dementia, she helped others who were dealing with that and supported the Alzheimer’s Association of Abilene, according to an obituary notice.

  • Alissa Martin, 54

    “She was my whole world,” Jermaine “J.J.” Jarmon, Ms. Martin’s longtime partner, said. “She took care of everything I had, and was proud to help anyone she could.”

  • Malaya Hammond, 17

Summer Camp Kids

Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian camp near Hunt, Texas, which has been run by the Eastland family since the 1930s, is revered by parents and alumni that includes three generations of descendants of Lyndon Johnson. The former first lady, Laura Bush, once worked as a counselor. About 750 girls were attending Camp Mystic this week.

Several girls who died or are now missing were in the low-lying cabins on the “flats,” where younger campers stay, less than 500 feet from the river. Most of the dead who have been identified, so far, were 8 or 9 years old, and were sleeping in the same cabin, nicknamed Bubble Inn.

  • Sarah Marsh, 8

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Janie Hunt, 9

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Rebecca Lawrence, 8, 
    and 
    Hanna Lawrence, 8

  • Eloise Peck, 8

  • Lila Bonner, 9

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Wynne Naylor

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Hadley Hanna, 8

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Mary Stevens, 8

  • Mary Kathryn Jacobe, 8

  • Mary Grace Baker

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Greta Toranzo, 10

  • Linnie McCown, 8

Camp Counselors and Directors

People working for Camp Mystic also died, including teenage counselors and the longtime director. The same is true of another nearby camp, Heart O’ the Hills.

  • Chloe Childress, 19

  • Dick Eastland, 70

    via The Kerrville Daily Times

  • Jane Ragsdale, 68

Other Out-of-Towners

Some people who were not from the region were staying with friends and relatives, or were passing through for reasons that have not yet been confirmed.

  • Beth Bryan, 61, 
    and 
    Hutch Bryan, 62

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