Camp Mystic, a 99 -year -old Christian summer camp in Texas Hill Country, organized 750 boys this week when catastrophic floods hit the Guadalupe River on early Friday, leaving at least 25 missing children.
Founded in 1926, Camp Mystic operates two sites along the river in Hunt, Texas. For a long time it has been announced as a place for girls to grow spiritually and “develop outstanding personal qualities and self -esteem,” according to their website.
Every summer, Mystic challenges its campers to “be a better person to be in Mystic” and let mystic bring the best of them. ” The camp website emphasizes friendships for life and a “healthy Christian environment.”

Sudden floods killed at least 24 people in Texas Hill Country. The identities of the deceased and missing have not yet been officially published, but dozens of families shared in the local Facebook groups that have received telephone calls from security officials who say that their daughters had not yet been located.
Camp Mystic said in an email to the parents of the approximately 750 campers that if they have not been directly contacted, his son is counted.
Dick and Tweeth Eastland, the current owners, have been involved with Camp Mystic since 1974. The camp has remained in the same family for generations, which date back to the 1930s.
A video on the Camp Mystic website shows an expanding campus by the river, with images of girls playing in the water, rowing boats, riding and playing tennis.
The sudden floods began around 4 in the morning on Friday after heavy rains during the night increased the Guadalupe River. The water reached Kerr county and the surrounding areas with such speed that officials say they could not issue evacuation orders in time.

“This happened very fast, for a very short period of time, which could not be predicted, even with the radar,” said Dalton Rice, Municipal Administrator of Kerville, the county headquarters. “This happened in less than a period of two hours.”
It was reported that the bodies were found in vehicles swept from the upstream areas.
The river had grown in Kerville and Comfort on Friday night, but it was not expected that the downstream sections, included near the spring branch, reached their maximum point until early Saturday. The National Meteorological Service projected a 37.2 feet crest, considered a moderate flood stage.