Helene made landfall on Florida's Gulf Coast late Thursday night and carved out a 650-mile (1,046-kilometer) swath of destruction all the way to the Atlantic coastal states of the Carolinas.
South Carolina has reported 30 deaths so far, and at least 25 people were killed in Georgia, according to state officials. Another 13 people were killed in Florida, in addition to four in Tennessee and two more in Virginia, according to numbers compiled by both CBS and CNN through emergency officials.
More than 1.6 million people are still without electricity as crews work around the clock to restore the power grid. Officials said it may take weeks for some communities to get electricity restored.
With many areas still cut off from rescue crews on the ground due to the flooding, some emergency operations are now being conducted to airdrop food, water and medical supplies to residents stranded in their neighborhoods.
At least 600 people have been reported missing in North Carolina, but downed telecommunication networks have played a large part in families not being able to contact their loved ones. Emergency officials have activated disaster roaming on all cell service providers in hopes of regaining communication with those missing.