'This is really scary, oh my goodness!' Chilling last words of Tennessee mom ...

'This is really scary, oh my goodness!' Chilling last words of Tennessee mom ...
'This is really scary, oh my goodness!' Chilling last words of Tennessee mom ...

A Tennessee woman who was livestreaming rising flash-floodwaters on Saturday drowned shortly after recording the video.

Linda Almond, of Waverly, Tenn., was on the roof of her home with her son, Tommy, when it collapsed and the pair were swept away by rushing water.

Tommy was rescued by authorities, but Almond did not survive, her family confirmed on Facebook.

Almond's one-minute Facebook live, which has now had more than 20,000 views, includes her final words: 'This is really scary. Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness.'

Linda Almond (pictured) drowned in Tennessee's catastrophic flooding on Saturday shortly after she live streamed the developing situation on Facebook

Linda Almond (pictured) drowned in Tennessee's catastrophic flooding on Saturday shortly after she live streamed the developing situation on Facebook

Her video showed mudded waters, carrying debris, roar through her Waverly, Tenn. community on Saturday morning

Her video showed mudded waters, carrying debris, roar through her Waverly, Tenn. community on Saturday morning

The mother went live on Facebook just before 10.15am on Saturday, showing her friends the developing floods in her community.

'Well, if anybody's seeing me on Facebook Live, we're being flooded right now in Waverly, Tennessee. Really scary,' she said at the start of the video.

The footage shows mudded waters carrying debris roar past her home. 

'Whoa. Whoa,' Almond said, voice shaking.

A man, likely Tommy, responded: 'I think something just hit the side of the house.'

Almond spoke her final words, reiterating how terrifying the situation was, and stopped the stream thereafter. 

The family told WKRN that Almond and Tommy managed to get to the roof of the house as the flood waters rose.

Unfortunately, the roof collapsed, sweeping the pair into the water. 

Almond (pictured) and her son, Tommy, took to the roof for safety when it collapsed, sweeping them into the rushing waters

Almond (pictured) and her son, Tommy, took to the roof for safety when it collapsed, sweeping them into the rushing waters

Tommy was rescued, but Almond (pictured) did not survive, her family confirmed on Sunday. Officials determined she died in the water

Tommy was rescued, but Almond (pictured) did not survive, her family confirmed on Sunday. Officials determined she died in the water

Tommy was rescued, but Almond remained missing for several hours.

The family confirmed on Facebook around 2pm Sunday that Almond's body had been found and officials determined she had died in the water. 

The flash floods came after 17 inches of rain fell over parts of Tennessee in a 24-hour period Saturday, which smashed the state's previous single-day record of 9.45 inches in 2010, according to the National Weather Service Nashville.  

As of Tuesday morning, at least 22 people were killed and 50 others missing as a result of the flooding. 

Two-year-old Kellen Cole Burrow is one of dozens still missing.

The boy's family was caught out by the deluge and his mother, Brittney LeAnn McCord, grabbed onto the clothes line and grasped hold of her five children. She held on for as long as she could outside their family's apartment as the waters rose before the powerful surge pulled Kellen from her arms, the Tennessean reported.

His stepfather, Kalaub McCord, was away that night, seeking treatment for a painful sinus infection at a nearby emergency room before the roads became clogged with floodwaters.    

Two-year-old Kellen Cole Burrows was swept from his mother's arms during Saturday's catastrophic flooding in Tennessee that has killed at least 21. He remains among 10 people still missing as of Monday

Kellen Burrow Vaughn (pictured) remains missing after he was swept away from a Waverly apartment complex by the floodwaters

Two-year-old Kellen Cole Burrows was swept from his mother's arms during Saturday's catastrophic flooding in Tennessee that has killed at least 21. He remains among 10 people still missing as of Monday 

Kalaub McCord's stepfather recalled the last time he saw the toddler, before he headed to a nearby emergency room for treatment for a painful sinus infection

Kalaub McCord's stepfather recalled the last time he saw the toddler, before he headed to a nearby emergency room for treatment for a painful sinus infection 

He recalled the last time he saw him. 

'I seen him that night when we put him to bed, but she had him in her arms whenever he got swept away,' he told Fox 17

It took McCord five hours to return to his family home, and he recounted helping others along the way, including two elderly women who couldn't swim, but he was unable to return to his wife and children in time. 

'I couldn’t get back to him, but she managed to save our other four children. If it wasn’t for her, I wouldn’t have any children right now,'  McCord said. 

Also missing is 15-year-old Lilly Bryant, who had just started

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