
Two young sisters killed in the catastrophic Texas floods sent their parents a heartbreaking ‘I love you’ text before they drowned.
Blair, 13, and Brooke Harber, 11, were found dead with their ‘hands locked together’ after the Guadalupe River rose to record heights over the weekend, completely flooding the camping area where they were staying with their family.
At least 82 people were killed in the devastation along the Guadalupe River, outside of San Antonio, and 41 remain missing.
Ten girls and a counselor are still unaccounted for at Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp along the river where 27 people died in the raging floods.
Survivors have described the floods as a ‘pitch black wall of death’ and said they received no emergency warnings.
Officials have come under scrutiny as to why residents and youth summer camps along the river were not alerted sooner about the severe weather or told to evacuate.
The National Weather Service has extended a flash flood watch for the Texas Hill Country, where an additional one to three inches of rain is expected to fall today, until 7pm local time (6pm EST).
The Texas Hill Country in the central part of the state is naturally prone to flash flooding. Friday’s flash floods started with a particularly bad storm that dropped most of its 12 inches of rain in the dark, early morning hours.
Christian summer camp for girls confirms 27 campers, counselors killed in floods
Sisters aged 11 and 13 send heartbreaking three-word text to loved ones as they drowned in flood
Texas braces for more flash flooding today
Catastrophic Texas floods kill 82 people, including 28 children
What caused the Guadalupe River floods?