The Birth and Early Years of the Storm Prediction Center

Stephen F. Corfidi NOAA/NWS/NCEP/Storm Prediction Center, Norman, Oklahoma

Search for other papers by Stephen F. Corfidi in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

Abstract

An overview of the birth and development of the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center, formerly known as the National Severe Storms Forecast Center, is presented. While the center’s immediate history dates to the middle of the twentieth century, the nation’s first centralized severe weather forecast effort actually appeared much earlier with the pioneering work of Army Signal Corps officer J. P. Finley in the 1870s.

Little progress was made in the understanding or forecasting of severe convective weather after Finley until the nascent aviation industry fostered an interest in meteorology in the 1920s. Despite the increased attention, forecasts for tornadoes remained a rarity until Air Force forecasters E. J. Fawbush and R. C. Miller gained notoriety by correctly forecasting the second tornado to strike Tinker Air Force Base in one week on 25 March 1948. The success of this and later Fawbush and Miller efforts led the Weather Bureau (predecessor to the National Weather Service) to establish its own severe weather unit on a temporary basis in the Weather Bureau–Army–Navy (WBAN) Analysis Center Washington, D.C., in March 1952.

The WBAN severe weather unit became a permanent, five-man operation under the direction of K. M. Barnett on 21 May 1952. The group was responsible for the issuance of “bulletins” (watches) for tornadoes, high winds, and/or damaging hail; outlooks for severe convective weather were inaugurated in January 1953. An unusually large number of strong tornadoes, forecaster inexperience, and criticism regarding the unit’s products culminated in staff and policy changes after it was renamed the Severe Local Storms Warning Service (SELS) in June 1953.

SELS moved from Washington to Kansas City in September 1954 in part to be closer to “tornado alley” and to take advantage of existing nationwide teletype communication facilities. The unit also gained a new leader when D. C. House replaced Barnett as SELS chief early that year. House instituted changes that led to more accurate watches. He also fostered the development of a separate research and development unit, an effort which had been initiated by Barnett.

SELS continued to grow as additional forecast and support staff were added through the remainder of the 1950s and 1960s. It was renamed the National Severe Storms Forecast Center (NSSFC) upon relocation to a new facility and the assumption of local and regional forecast duties in 1966. Meanwhile, the research group to which SELS had given birth in the mid-1950s left Kansas City and merged with the Weather Bureau’s Weather Radar Laboratory to form the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) in Norman, Oklahoma, in 1964. SELS, renamed the Storm Prediction Center, joined NSSL in Norman in January 1997.

Corresponding author address: Stephen F. Corfidi, NOAA/NWS/NCEP, 1313 Halley Circle, Norman, OK 73069.

Abstract

An overview of the birth and development of the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center, formerly known as the National Severe Storms Forecast Center, is presented. While the center’s immediate history dates to the middle of the twentieth century, the nation’s first centralized severe weather forecast effort actually appeared much earlier with the pioneering work of Army Signal Corps officer J. P. Finley in the 1870s.

Little progress was made in the understanding or forecasting of severe convective weather after Finley until the nascent aviation industry fostered an interest in meteorology in the 1920s. Despite the increased attention, forecasts for tornadoes remained a rarity until Air Force forecasters E. J. Fawbush and R. C. Miller gained notoriety by correctly forecasting the second tornado to strike Tinker Air Force Base in one week on 25 March 1948. The success of this and later Fawbush and Miller efforts led the Weather Bureau (predecessor to the National Weather Service) to establish its own severe weather unit on a temporary basis in the Weather Bureau–Army–Navy (WBAN) Analysis Center Washington, D.C., in March 1952.

The WBAN severe weather unit became a permanent, five-man operation under the direction of K. M. Barnett on 21 May 1952. The group was responsible for the issuance of “bulletins” (watches) for tornadoes, high winds, and/or damaging hail; outlooks for severe convective weather were inaugurated in January 1953. An unusually large number of strong tornadoes, forecaster inexperience, and criticism regarding the unit’s products culminated in staff and policy changes after it was renamed the Severe Local Storms Warning Service (SELS) in June 1953.

SELS moved from Washington to Kansas City in September 1954 in part to be closer to “tornado alley” and to take advantage of existing nationwide teletype communication facilities. The unit also gained a new leader when D. C. House replaced Barnett as SELS chief early that year. House instituted changes that led to more accurate watches. He also fostered the development of a separate research and development unit, an effort which had been initiated by Barnett.

SELS continued to grow as additional forecast and support staff were added through the remainder of the 1950s and 1960s. It was renamed the National Severe Storms Forecast Center (NSSFC) upon relocation to a new facility and the assumption of local and regional forecast duties in 1966. Meanwhile, the research group to which SELS had given birth in the mid-1950s left Kansas City and merged with the Weather Bureau’s Weather Radar Laboratory to form the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) in Norman, Oklahoma, in 1964. SELS, renamed the Storm Prediction Center, joined NSSL in Norman in January 1997.

Corresponding author address: Stephen F. Corfidi, NOAA/NWS/NCEP, 1313 Halley Circle, Norman, OK 73069.

Save
  • Abbe, C., 1899: Unnecessary tornado alarms. Mon. Wea. Rev.,27, 255.

  • Altman, H. E., 1954: Notes about the history of tornado forecasts and warnings. NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, 26 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • Anthony, R., W. Carle, J. T. Schaefer, R. Livingston, A. Siebers, F. Mosher, J. Young, and T. Wittaker, 1982: The Centralized Storm Information System at the NOAA Kansas City complex. Preprints, Ninth Conf. on Weather Forecasting and Analysis, Seattle, WA, Amer. Meteor. Soc., 40–43.

  • Barnett, K. M., 1953: Semi-objective procedure to indicate when tornado forecasts should be issued. NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, 5 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • Bates, F. C., 1955: A technique for predicting extreme turbulence related to thunderstorms. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,36, 379–383.

  • Beebe, R. G., 1955: Types of air masses in which tornadoes occur. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,36, 349–350.

  • —— and F. C. Bates, 1955: A mechanism for assisting in the release of convective instability. Mon. Wea. Rev.,83, 1–10.

  • Bradford, M., 1999: Historical roots of modern tornado forecasts and warnings. Wea. Forecasting,14,.

  • Carr, J. A., 1952: A preliminary report on the tornadoes of 21–22 March 1952. Mon. Wea. Rev.,80, 50–58.

  • ——, 1955: The delta-t method for determining low-level warm air advection. NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, 12 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • Congressional Record, 1952: 82d Cong., 2d sess., pt. 2:2757 and pt. 3:3558–3559.

  • Doswell, C. A. III, S. J. Weiss, and R. H. Johns, 1993: Tornado forecasting: A review. The Tornado: Its Structure, Dynamics, Prediction, and Hazards. Geophys. Monogr., No. 79, Amer. Geophys. Union, 557–571.

  • ——, A. R. Moller, and H. E. Brooks, 1999: Storm spotting and public awareness since the first tornado forecasts of 1948. Wea. Forecasting,14, 544–557.

  • Foster, D. S., 1953: The severe weather forecasting program at Kansas City - March 1 to August 31, 1953. NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, 16 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1958: Thunderstorm gusts compared with computed downdraft speeds. Mon. Wea. Rev.,86, 91–94.

  • ——, and F. C. Bates, 1956: A hail size forecasting technique. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,37, 135–141.

  • Fujita, T., H. Newstein, and M. Tepper, 1956: Mesoanalysis, an important scale in the analysis of weather data. USWB Research Paper 39, 83 pp.

  • Galway, J. G., 1956: The lifted index as a predictor of latent instability. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,37, 528–529.

  • ——, 1973: Severe local storm forecasting in the United States. SELS Workshop Notes, National Severe Storms Forecast Center, Kansas City, MO, 13 pp.

  • ——, 1981: Ten famous tornado outbreaks. Weatherwise,34, 100–109.

  • ——, 1985a: J. P. Finley: The first severe storms forecaster (Part 1). Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,66, 1389–1395.

  • ——, 1985b: J. P. Finley: The first severe storms forecaster (Part 2). Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,66, 1506–1510.

  • ——, 1989: The evolution of severe thunderstorm criteria within the Weather Service. Wea. Forecasting,4, 585–592.

  • ——, 1992: Early severe thunderstorm forecasting and research by the United States Weather Bureau. Wea. Forecasting,7, 564–587.

  • ——, 1994: The Kansas City Chapter of the American Meteorological Society: A History 1934–1994. 73 pp. [Available from NOAA/NCEP/NWS Aviation Weather Center, Kansas City, MO 64106.].

  • Goddard, B. B., 1962: The development of aircraft investigations of squall lines from 1956–1960. NSSP Rep. 2, Washington, DC, 28 pp. [Available from National Information Service, Operations Division, Springfield, VA 22161.].

  • House, D. C., 1952: Use of Showalter’s index. Forecaster’s Forum,4, 7–9.

  • Hughes, P., 1970: A Century of Weather Service. Gordon and Breach, 212 pp.

  • Humphreys, W. J., 1926: The tornado. Mon. Wea. Rev.,54, 501–503.

  • Knox, J. L., 1958: The severe local storm centre at Kansas City. Royal Meteor. Soc., Canadian Branch,8, 35–51.

  • Lee, J. T., 1955: Thunderstorms and tornadoes of February 1, 1955. Mon. Wea. Rev.,83, 45–51.

  • ——, and J. G. Galway, 1958: The jet chart. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,39, 217–223.

  • Lemons, H., 1938: Some meteorological aspects of Nebraska tornadoes. Mon. Wea. Rev.,66, 205–208.

  • Lewis, J. M., 1996: Joseph G. Galway. Wea. Forecasting,11, 263–268.

  • Lloyd, J. R., 1942: The development and trajectories of tornadoes. Mon. Wea. Rev.,70, 65–75.

  • Lynch, D., 1970: Tornado . . . Texas Demon in the wind. Texian Press, 163 p.

  • Maddox, R. A., and C. A. Crisp, 1999: The Tinker AFB tornadoes of March 1948. Wea. Forecasting,14, 492–499.

  • Magor, B. W., 1958: A meso-low associated with a severe storm. Mon. Wea. Rev.,86, 81–90.

  • McDermott, P., 1951: Flash—Tornado warning! The Saturday Evening Post, 28 July, 17–19, 53–57.

  • McPherson, R. M., 1994: The National Centers for Environmental Prediction: Operational climate, ocean, and weather prediction for the 21st century. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,75, 363–373.

  • Miller, R. C., 1972: Notes on the analysis and severe storm forecasting procedures of the Air Force Global Weather Central. AWS Tech. Rep. 200 (rev.), Air Weather Service, Scott Air Base, IL, 190 pp. [Available from the National Techncal Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Rd, Springfield, VA 22151.].

  • ——, and C. A. Crisp, 1999: Events leading to establishment of the United States Air Force Severe Weather Warning Center in February 1951. Wea. Forecasting,14, 500–506.

  • Murphy, A. H., 1996: The Finley affair: A signal event in the history of forecast verification. Wea. Forecasting,11, 3–20.

  • Ostby, F. P., 1992: Operations of the National Severe Storms Forecast Center. Wea. Forecasting,7, 546–563.

  • ——, 1984: Use of CSIS in severe weather prediction. Recent Advances in Civil Space Remote Sensing, H. W. Yates, Ed., Proc. SPIE, Vol. 481, Arlington, VA, 78–83. [Available from Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers, Box 10, Bellingham, WA 98227.].

  • ——, E. J. Parvin, and J. G. Galway, 1989: NSSFC special report: Kansas City Forecast Office, 1950–1989. NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, 147 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • Peterson, R. E., 1992: Johannes Letzmann: A pioneer in the study of tornadoes. Wea. Forecasting,7, 166–184.

  • Popkin, R., 1967: The Environmental Science Services Administration. Praeger, 278 pp.

  • Riehl, H., and Coauthors, 1952: Forecasting in Middle Latitudes. Meteor. Monogr., No. 5, Amer. Meteor. Soc., 80 pp.

  • Schaefer, J. T., 1986: Severe thunderstorm forecasting: A historical perspective. Wea. Forecasting,1, 164–189.

  • Showalter, A. K., 1953: A stability index for thunderstorm forecasting. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.,34, 250–252.

  • ——, and J. R. Fulks, 1943: Preliminary report on tornadoes. U.S. Weather Bureau, Washington, DC, 162 pp.

  • Tepper, M., 1950: A proposed mechanism of squall lines. J. Meteor.,7, 21–29.

  • U.S. Air Force, 1951: When to duck. Takeoff, 22 July, 5.

  • U.S. Army, 1887: Report of the Chief Signal Officer of the U.S. Army, Washington, D.C., 21–22.

  • U.S. Weather Bureau, 1950: Statements concerning tornado forecasting. Circular Letter No. 52–20. 12 July, 1 p. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1952: Severe weather bulletins. Instructions and information for severe weather unit. No. 6, 20 May, 5 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1953a: Relations with Air Weather Service. Instructions and information for severe weather staff. No. 32, 30 January, 1 p. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1953b: Over-forecasting. Instructions and information for severe weather staff. No. 68, 8 June, 2 pp. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1953c: Criteria for severe thunderstorms. SELS Center instructions. No. 85, 2 October, 1 p. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1954: 700mb “no advection” lines. SELS Center Note to Forecasters, 3 March, 1 p. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • ——, 1955: Memorandum. 7 June 1955. [Available from NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, OK 73069.].

  • Varney, B. M., 1926: Aerological evidence as to the cause of tornadoes. Mon. Wea. Rev.,54, 163–165.

  • Whitnah, D. R., 1961: A History of the United States Weather Bureau. University of Illinois Press, 267 pp.

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 0 0 0
Full Text Views 2174 1097 50
PDF Downloads 571 228 19