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What we know about the victims of the Uvalde shooting.

Honor students. Teachers. Two cousins in the same class. In all, those killed in Tuesday’s shooting included 19 children and two adults.

Crosses remembering the victims of the shooting outside the school on Thursday.Credit...Callaghan O'Hare for The New York Times

Late at night, when everything is calm, Ana Rodriguez looks at smiling pictures of her daughter, Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10, who died in the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting. It’s the only time she has been able to grieve in the chaos of the massacre’s aftermath.

“I cry and think of her,” she said.

Maite was the only girl in her family, and was happy all her life, her mother said.

“If there was a picture of loving,” Ms. Rodriguez said, “it would be a picture of her.”

Maite was focused, ambitious and determined, her mother said. Before the pandemic, she was a straight-A student. Her grades slipped a bit during the pandemic, but she was working hard to turn that around. On the morning of the shooting, she received an award for making the school’s A-B Honor Roll and won recognition for being a computer wizard.

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Maite Yuleana RodriguezCredit...

Since kindergarten, Maite had dreamed of becoming a marine biologist. One day she surprised Ms. Rodriguez by announcing that she wanted to go to Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, after overhearing someone talking about the marine biology program there. Ms. Rodriguez said she had hoped to take Maite to Corpus Christi and show her the school. “We never got the opportunity to go,” she said.

Whenever Maite put her mind to something, she did it, Ms. Rodriguez said. When a friend gave her a toy sewing machine, she researched how to use it — and fix it — on YouTube. She began to make pillows for her mother, stepfather and little brother with motifs of bees, honeycombs and cowboys.

“I want the world to know she was my absolute best friend,” Ms. Rodriguez said. “We did everything together. She was charismatic, loving, ambitious, competitive, she was self-driven, focused, she was a fighter and my best friend. She was my sweet girl.”

Maite was one of the 21 people — 19 students and two teachers — who were killed by a gunman on Tuesday at Robb Elementary School. The other students were Jackie Cazares and Eliahna “Ellie” Garcia, who were 9; Nevaeh Alyssa Bravo, Makenna Lee Elrod, Jose Flores, Uziyah Garcia, Amerie Jo Garza, Xavier Lopez, Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, Tess Marie Mata, Alithia Haven Ramirez, Annabelle Rodriguez, Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, Layla Salazar, Jailah Silguero, Eliahana Torres and Rojelio Torres, who were 10; and Maranda Gail Mathis, 11. The teachers were Irma Garcia, 48, and Eva Mireles, 44.

This was Makenna Lee Elrod’s first year playing softball and she reveled in it. She scored a homerun and, when a game came to an end, it took at least 20 minutes for her to give bear hugs to all her teammates and say goodbye.

“Makenna had a presence about her,” her mother, April Brown Elrod, said in a Facebook message. “You knew when she was in the room. She brought joy to all who knew her.”

Makenna made friends everywhere she went. About a month before the shooting, she posed for a photo with her friends at Robb Elementary School’s field day. Arm-in-arm, Makenna, Jailah Silguero and Maite Yuleana Rodriguez smiled for the camera. Eliahna Garcia peeked from behind. Makenna also took a selfie with her friend Tess Marie Mata. All of them died in the shooting.

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Tess Marie Mata, left, and Makenna Lee Elrod.Credit...

Makenna played flag football and did flips in gymnastics. She loved feeding animals with her dad, and she looked forward to showing pigs, steers and chickens in a stock show with the 4-H youth club in a few years. She often wrote notes and hid them for her family to find later, and she attended her local Baptist church. She loved the religious song “The Lion and the Lamb,” belting it out in the shower and in the car.

“I’m struggling,” her mother said in mid-June. “We had so many plans, and she had a bright future. I feel like when I found out she was missing I held my breath, and I haven’t been able to catch it yet.”

Faith Mata, a 21-year-old college student, was 11 years older than her littler sister, Tess, but they were always close.

“Tess was just very joyful,” Ms. Mata remembered on Friday as she stood at the front door of their home in Uvalde, sometimes using the present tense to describe her sister, who died after a gunman stormed her fourth-grade class at Robb Elementary.

“She was sassy,” Ms Mata said. “She loves dancing. She loves get dressed up with her hair done. She’s just a ball of joy. I don’t think she ever came in contact with someone and they didn’t leave with a smile on their face.”

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Tess MataCredit...

Tess, who had a cat named Oliver, planned to be a veterinarian, but Ms. Mata thought her younger sister was perhaps more suited to become a teacher. She said she was an stellar student who loved Tess, who had a cat named Oliver, planned to be a veterinarian, but Ms. Mata said her younger sister was perhaps more suited to become a teacher.

Tess was “an excellent student” and “loved going to school and being with her friends,” Ms. Mata said. “She loved her two teachers.”

The sisters often watched old Disney movies but much of their time together was spent on the softball field where Tess became a second-base standout under the tutelage of her older sister.

“That little girl taught herself to pitch by watching YouTube videos and would have been an amazing pitcher,” Ms. Mata said.

When Maranda Gail Mathis, 11, started school, she was shy and quiet, her mother, Deanna Gornto, said. But as the year went on, she opened up and made friends.

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Maranda Gail MathisCredit...

She was a creative girl who loved music, mermaids and unicorns — encouraged by her mother and aunts. She and her younger brother were always together and loved to play Roblox on her tablet. But Maranda also loved the outdoors. She enjoyed running during school field days, swimming in the river and showing rocks she found to her mother.

“The one thing I know is she loved her whole family,” Ms. Gornto said. “She loved all of us.”

Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, known as Lexi, was an honor student at Robb Elementary School who loved TikTok, dreamed of being a lawyer and was “the student every teacher wants,” said her mother, Kimberly Rubio.

On Tuesday morning, Lexi, a fourth grader, had just received a good citizenship award and an honor roll award for getting all A’s. Later that day, all of her family’s joy was ripped away, Ms. Rubio said.

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Alexandria Aniyah RubioCredit...

“We talked about women’s rights, and she was a budding feminist,” said Ms. Rubio, 33, her voice breaking at times.

Lexi’s parents said they had waited until the last moment to name her, deciding on something that would stand out when called at a high school graduation.

“She was my baby,” Ms. Rubio said. “I don’t want anybody else to go through this.”

Layla Salazar was an energetic girl who had just won three first-place ribbons for athletics at school and was already planning summer sleepovers with her friends at her grandparents’ house, her grandfather Vincent Salazar said.

“My granddaughter was one that loved everything about life, and they took it away from her,” Mr. Salazar said in an interview in front of his home in Uvalde on Thursday. “They took her away from us. How do you mend a broken heart from a family as close as we had?”

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Layla SalazarCredit...

Relatives from across the country have come to Uvalde to be with the family as they grieve, Mr. Salazar said, filling the home after the loss of a little girl whose absence could not be felt more strongly.  

“Layla, to our family, was the heart of our life.”

 When asked his name by a reporter, Mr. Salazar paused.

 “I was Grandpa — I was Layla Salazar’s grandpa. That was what she called me, was Grandpa.”

Irma Garcia, a teacher of more than two decades, was known as a steadfast optimist in her family. She would crack jokes at gatherings in Uvalde, Texas, sing her favorite classic rock tunes during parties and help her nephew, John Martinez, with homework.

“She’s always been optimistic about everything, and just so loving with the people in her life,” said Mr. Martinez, 21, a student at Texas State University.

On Tuesday, he and his family had gathered to process the news from the authorities: Ms. Garcia had been killed at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde.

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Irma GarciaCredit...

When the authorities went inside the classroom moments after the shooting, Mr. Martinez said, they had “found her body there, embracing children in her arms pretty much until her last breath.”

She had treated her students as if they were her own children, he said, so it had been easy for loved ones to possibly “picture her putting her life on the line.”

Ms. Garcia — or Tia Garcia, as Mr. Martinez referred to his aunt in Spanish — was “like a second mom” to her nephews and students, he said.

“She brings a joy and a light to the room.”

Her husband of 24 years, Joe Garcia, died two days after the shooting of a heart attack. He had gone to her memorial on Thursday morning to drop off flowers, ruptured by the grief of losing the love of his life, Mr. Martinez said.

Jailah Silguero, 10, was the youngest of four children, the “baby” of her family, her father said. She loved going to school and seeing her friends. Jailah had told her father, Jacob Silguero, 35, on Monday night that she wanted to stay home on Tuesday. It was uncharacteristic of her, and by morning, Mr. Silguero said, she seemed to have forgotten about it. She got dressed and went to school as usual.

“I can’t believe this happened to my daughter, my baby,” he said.

He added, “It’s always been a fear of mine to lose a kid.”

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Jailah SilgueroCredit...

Mr. Silguero and the family were getting ready to go to a funeral home on Wednesday after having spent hours at the SSGT Willie de Leon Civic Center the day before waiting for information about Jailah. Officials asked the family to give a DNA sample using a swab.

“I figured after the DNA swab test, it was something bad,” he said. “About an hour later, they called to confirm that she had passed.”

Jailah’s siblings are taking it hard, Mr. Silguero said: “They just want their sister back.”

Jailah Silguero was among 21 people — 19 children and two adults — killed in the massacre on Tuesday.

Jackie Cazares and Annabelle Rodriguez were cousins in the same classroom at Robb Elementary School. Jackie, who had her First Communion two weeks ago, was the social one, said Polly Flores, who was Jackie’s aunt and Annabelle’s great-aunt. “She was outgoing; she always had to be the center of attention,” Ms. Flores said. “She was my little diva.”

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Jackie CazaresCredit...

Annabelle, an honor roll student, was quieter. But she and her cousin were close, so close that Annabelle’s twin sister, who was home-schooled, “was always jealous,” Ms. Flores said. “We are a very tight family,” she said. “It’s just devastating.”

Amerie Jo Garza was a friendly 10-year-old who loved Play-Doh.

Amerie Jo was “full of life, a jokester, always smiling,” her father, Alfred Garza III, said in a brief phone interview. She did not talk a lot about school but liked spending time with her friends at lunch, in the playground and during recess. “She was very social,” he said. “She talked to everybody.”

Amerie Jo’s extended family had gathered in the room when the Texas Rangers broke the horrible news late Tuesday.

The family’s loss came after losing several loved ones to Covid-19 over the past two years.

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Amerie Jo GarzaCredit...

“We were finally getting a break, nobody was passing away,” Mr. Garza said. “Then this happened.”

Mr. Garza, who works at a used car dealership in Uvalde, said he was on a lunch break when Amerie Jo’s mother told him she could not get their daughter out of the school because it was on lockdown.

“I just went straight over there and found the chaos,” he said. He recalled seeing cars backing up on the streets, with parents trying to enter the school to find their children. Police cars were everywhere.

At first, he said, he did not think that anyone had been hurt. Then he heard that children had died. For hours, he awaited word about his daughter.

“I was kind of in shock,” he said, after hearing from the Texas Rangers. When he got home, he started to go through her pictures. “That’s when I kind of had the release,” he said. “I started crying and started mourning.”

Eva Mireles, who was in her 40s, loved teaching the children at Robb Elementary School, most recently fourth grade. Neighbors described her as a good-natured person who was usually smiling.

“She brought the neighborhood together,” said Javier Garcia, 18, who lived next door. “She loved those children.”

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Eva MirelesCredit...

A cousin by marriage, Joe Costilla, 40, who lives down the block, said that outside of work Ms. Mireles liked to run marathons and was very athletic. “We were always hanging together — barbecues — she was a wonderful person,” he said, holding back tears. They had planned to get together over Memorial Day weekend.

Mr. Costilla’s mother, Esperanza, rushed to his home to console her grandchildren, ages 14 and 10, who knew her well.

“They are taking it really hard,” she said. “She was the kind of teacher everybody loved.”

Audrey Garcia, 48, the mother of a daughter with Down syndrome named Gabby, recalled Ms. Mireles as a transformational teacher in her child’s life.

Gabby is 23 now, with a high school diploma under her belt. Ms. Mireles had been her third-grade teacher. It was only a couple of years earlier, Ms. Garcia said, that schools in the Uvalde area had begun integrating children with mental disabilities into regular classrooms.

“It was new for teachers in that area,” Ms. Garcia said. Ms. Mireles, she said, threw herself into the work. “She used every teaching method she knew to help Gabby reach her highest potential,” she said. “She never saw that potential as lower than anyone else’s in her classroom.”

Jose Flores, 10, had a pink T-shirt that said: “Tough guys wear pink.” His grandfather George Rodriguez called him “my little Josesito” and kept a photograph of the boy in his wallet.

Mr. Rodriguez, who also lost a niece in Tuesday’s shooting, attended counseling at the civic center in Uvalde but said it had offered him little reprieve from the pain. “They were beautiful, innocent children,” he said.

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Jose FloresCredit...

Xavier Lopez, 10, made the honor roll on the day he was killed. He was eager to come home and share the news with his three brothers, but his grandparents said Xavier decided to stay at school to watch a movie and eat popcorn with his classmates.

They remembered Xavier as an exuberant baseball and soccer player who had a girlfriend at school with whom he chatted away on the phone.

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Xavier LopezCredit...

Leonard Sandoval, 54, Xavier’s grandfather, stood outside the family’s home on Wednesday trying to make sense of the incomprehensible. “Why?” he asked. “Why him? Why the kids?”

Nikki and Brett Cross said their nephew, Uziyah Garcia, 10, had moved to Uvalde to live with them just in time for the start of the school year. He loved playing basketball, soccer, the virtual-reality game Gorilla Tag and Fortnite. His favorite after-school snack was a Nutella sandwich with blue Takis, which he would try to convince others to try.

“He was goofy, he loved to make you laugh,” Ms. Cross said. “He loved making everybody laugh.”

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Uziyah GarciaCredit...Manny Renfro, via Associated Press

Uziyah, or Uzi for short, would have liked to be a professional gamer or YouTuber. But he also expressed an interest in becoming a police officer, because he wanted to help people.

He was thrilled that he had a male teacher at Robb, Arnulfo Reyes, and he talked about him all the time, they said. Days after the shooting, they got his possessions back from the classroom. His math notebook had been grazed by a bullet. Tucked among his things was a portrait he had drawn of Mr. Reyes, who was badly injured in the attack.

Uzi’s favorite color was red, and Ms. Cross keeps seeing red cardinals on her lawn. She sees them as a sign that his energy is giving her the strength to go on.

Eliahna “Ellie” Garcia was just a few days shy of turning 10, her father, Steven Garcia, said in a brief phone interview.

He had been looking forward to being the D.J. at Ellie’s birthday party this summer, he said in a Facebook post, adding that she had been “a doll and was the happiest ever.”

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Ellie GarciaCredit...

Two days after his daughter was killed, Mr. Garcia said he was “too deep in grief” to share his memories of her but wanted to thank people for their prayers.

“We miss her,” he said.

In his Facebook post, he wrote to Ellie: “Please try and stay by our side, amor.”

Eliahana Torres, 10, was determined to get a hit in softball.

She was proud to be on the team for the first time, but wanted to stop striking out. So her grandfather hung a ball outside the family home, and Eliahana would work on her swing after practice, over and over. “One more,” she would say, as her family told her to come in for bed. “One more.”

Her family said she was a steadfast, incandescent presence in the home she shared with her grandparents, mother and aunt. She loved to scare her aunt, Laura Cabrales, by springing out from behind a door and shouting “Boo!” She danced around in front of her phone and belted out Taylor Swift’s “You Belong With Me.”

“She was my love,” her grandfather, Victor M. Cabrales, said. “She was one of a kind.”

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Eliahana TorresCredit...

After Mr. Cabrales had heart surgery a few years ago, Eliahana accompanied him on his doctor-prescribed walks, helping him to scoop up pecans that fell from the trees shading their neighborhood near Robb Elementary School. She made sure her grandparents took their medications. On hot days, she poured a glass of ice water to be waiting for her grandfather when he came home from work. The family jokingly called her “enfermerita,” the little nurse.

She loved her cat and goldfish and cherished a trip to the lone Starbucks in Uvalde. As summer approached, her aunt, Ms. Cabrales, said that Eliahana told them she would probably cry on the last day of school because she would miss her friends so much.

Euodulia Orta, 30, confirmed that her nephew Rojelio Torres, 10, died in the shooting.

“We’re still trying to cope with it,” she said. “We don’t know what to do.”

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Rojelio TorresCredit...

Her nephew was the second-oldest of four children, and he always helped out his siblings, she said.

“He was a loving person,” she added. “He loved his siblings.”

Reporting was contributed by Karen Zraick, David Montgomery, Richard Fausset, Jack Healy, Eduardo Medina, Christina Morales, Josh Peck, Campbell Robertson, Edgar Sandoval, Alex Traub and John Yoon.

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