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This part of Texas Hill Country is known for flash floods. Why were so many people caught off guard when the river turned ...
More than 130 people are dead after devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country that began early on the Fourth of July.
Caroline Scott of Missouri, left, embraces Mikayla Glosson, 14, and her mother Sarah Quye, both of Boerne, at a vigil Friday in front of a growing memorial for flood victims in downtown Kerrville. The ...
More than an hour passed between Camp Mystic receiving a severe flood warning and a decision to evacuate young campers asleep in cabins by the Guadalupe River.
Places recently hit hard -- like Kerrville, Texas, and Burnet, Texas -- are inside this heightened potential for flash ...
Officials in Kerr County, Texas, are set to meet Monday as the region reels from devastating floods earlier this month — and after a new round of rain this weekend halted the search for dozens of ...
Officials announced on Sunday that the overall death toll in the ongoing Texas flooding has risen past 130 killed. There are ...
Mourners paid tribute at funerals and memorial services on Saturday as the number of fatalities rose to nearly 130.
Sunday morning recovering efforts were suspended in Kerr County due to heavy rainfall and a new flash flood warning issued ...
The National Weather Service warned that the Guadalupe River could surge to nearly 15 feet—5 feet above flood stage—by Sunday ...
A flash flood emergency was issued for southeastern San Saba County, including Colorado Bend State Park, where six to eight ...
At least 161 are still unaccounted for after the July Fourth floods that saw the waters of the Guadalupe rise to historic ...