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The girls in the “Bubble Inn” cabin started June 29 at Camp Mystic with great-big smiles.

A photo shows all 13 girls and two counselors in spotless white dresses and skirts and white sneakers, beaming at the camera.

Less than five days later every person in the photo was swept away by the Texas flash floods.

The residents of the Bubble Inn cabin at Camp Mystic. Facebook

Tragedy began around 4 a.m. Friday as the girls were sleeping just a few hundred feet from the Guadalupe River.

The bodies of 10 of the girls, ages 8 and 9, have been recovered, along with counselor Chloe Childress, 18.

Three girls and counselor Katherine Ferruzzo, 19, have not been found.

The rising third and fourth graders, as the youngest campers, were housed in the flatlands — closest to the river, with some cabins just 225 feet from the bank. The older girls stayed on higher ground on “Senior Hill.”

After a freak rain storm dumped a month’s worth of rain on the Texas Hill Country in just two hours, the Guadalupe rose 20 feet in a matter of minutes, cresting upstream in Hunt, Texas around 6:30 a.m.

Camp Mystic counselor Chloe Childress, 18, was one of the bodies recovered. Instagram/stevenoviello
Katherine Ferruzzo, 19, has not been found since the flood. Facebook

The camp with 750 girls — a storied Christian sleep-away destination for some of Texas’ most elite families in Houston, Dallas and Austin — now counts 27 victims dead, with 10 girls, plus Ferruzzo, missing.

Most victims are young girls from the flatlands cabins.

Photos of inside a nearby cabin, the Handy Hut, shows the water rose nearly to the top of the door frame before receding.

Crosses seen on the wall at the camp in a room hit by the flooding from the Guadalupe River. REUTERS/Marco Bello
The water line from the flooding seen in a room at Camp Mystic. REUTERS/Marco Bello
A mud-covered classroom at Camp Mystic. REUTERS

In all, 75 people have been confirmed dead in the flash flooding that terrorized Kerr County over the weekend, with the statewide death toll hitting 95.

Among the dead at Camp Mystic is the camp’s owner, Richard “Dick” Eastland. He tried to rescue the campers at Bubble Inn, his son told the Washington Post, but waters from the river and another creek rushed in from both sides, leaving no escape for anyone.


Follow The Post’s coverage on the deadly Texas flooding


Searchers found Eastland’s body along with the remains of three girls inside a black SUV.

One of the cabins destroyed by flooding at Camp Mystic. Photo by RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images
Items belonging to campers piled outside a cabin. REUTERS
Items and mattresses scattered across a cabin at Camp Mystic after the flood. REUTERS

“It made like a swirl right around those cabins like a toilet bowl,” camp employee Craig Althaus told the outlet.

Camp counselor Childress also died while desperately trying to rescue the girls in her care.

She upheld a “selfless and fierce commitment to others,” Jonathan Eades, head of school at Kinkaid School in Houston, from which Chloe had just graduated, wrote in a statement.

A search and rescue team looking for people on a boat at Camp Mystic. Photo by RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images
Rescue workers searching through fallen trees and debris. Photo by RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images
People sorting through campers’ belongings at Camp Mystic. Getty Images

Tragedy in the Bubble Inn cabin

Found dead:

  • Margaret Bellows, 8
  • Lila Bonner, 9
  • Janie Hunt, 9
  • Lainey Landry
  • Sarah Marsh, 8
  • Linnie McCown, 8
  • Wynne Naylor, 8
  • Eloise Peck, 9
  • Renee Smajstria, 9
  • Mary Stevens, 8
  • Chloe Childress, 18

Still missing:

  • Molly DeWitt, 9
  • Ellen Getten, 8
  • Abby Pohl
  • Katherine Ferruzzo, 19

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