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Timeline of events

Our logo through the years...

Logo 1911 to 1939
1911-1939
 
Logo 1939 to 1978
1939-1978
 
Logo 1978 to 1990
1978-1990
 
Logo 1990 to 1997
1990-1997
 
Logo 1997 to 2000
1997-2000
 
Logo 2000 to present
2000-
The new identity moves away from the traditional weathervane to encompass the wider vision of the organisation.

 

 

 
Photo: Captain (later Rear-Admiral) Robert FitzRoy

1854: The Met Office is founded to provide information on the weather and marine currents to the marine community. This small department of the Board of Trade is headed by Captain (later Rear-Admiral) Robert FitzRoy, RN.

1882: Synoptic charts are drawn for the North Atlantic for the period 1 August-3 September. These form the basis for discussions about weather systems.

1909: Transatlantic shipping starts to use wireless telegraphy to transmit weather messages ashore.

1914-1918: The Great War highlights the importance of weather forecasts for military operations.

Photo: Lewis Fry Richardson

1922: Lewis Fry Richardson experiments with numerical forecasting methods, but the equations are too long and complex to produce useful results by manual calculation.

1939: The start of World War II sees the introduction of radiosondes to gather observations from the upper air - a collection of balloon-borne sensors transmit data on pressure, temperature and humidity to receiving sites on land. Later developments in radar enabled upper winds to be computed.

Photo: Dunstable 1940

1940: The Met Office moves from London to wartime accommodation at Dunstable. (As a temporary measure the Forecast Division moves to Birmingham at three days' notice - without breaking the flow of data to outstations.)

1942: The Meteorological Research Flight is formed using aircraft of the RAF.

1944: The RAF Chief Meteorologist - Group Captain James Stagg (a Met Office employee) briefs General Dwight D Eisenhower on 5 June that a 36-hour 'weather window' is imminent. This prompts Eisenhower to order the start of Operation Overlord on 6 June. (The D-Day landings had been planned for 5 June, but had been delayed by 24 hours the previous day owing to bad weather.)

1946: Under recommendations of the International Civil Aviation Organization and the International Meteorological Organization, 13 permanent North Atlantic stations (maintained by a consortium of eight countries) are set up to provide vital marine weather data. The Met Office (for the UK) uses four converted ex-Royal Navy corvettes to man two stations and share the operation of another.

1953: A severe depression and storm surge in the North Sea causes catastrophic flooding in south-east England. This leads to planning and eventual construction of the Thames Barrier, also the development of the Met Office's Storm Tide Forecasting Service.

Photo: George Cowling

1954: The first live BBC Television forecast, lasting five minutes, was made by Met Office forecaster George Cowling.

1958: The Met Office becomes an approved place of deposit for weather records under the Public Records Act.

Photo: London Weather Centre opens

1959: London Weather Centre opens. In Bracknell, the first turf is turned for the new headquarters building.

1962: Her Majesty the Queen performs the official opening ceremony at Bracknell. The Met Office takes delivery of its first electronic computer so that numerical forecast techniques can be applied operationally.

1964: The first operational satellite images become available.

1972: An IBM 360/195 computer is installed in the Richardson Wing of the Bracknell headquarters, creating the world's most technically advanced forecast centre.

1973: The UK joins the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (based at Reading) as one of the founding members to support the production and research into medium-range forecasts.

1974: The Met Office takes part in the first global observing field experiment.

1978: The US Tiros-N satellite is launched. It carries the first Met Office stratospheric sounding unit, designed to make world-wide measurements of stratospheric temperature.

1981: The Met Office's first supercomputer - the Cyber 205 - is installed to run the new 15-level atmospheric model. The airborne spread of foot-and-mouth disease to livestock on the south coast of England is predicted, and subsequently happens.

1982: The first global operational forecasting model is introduced to assist in operations for the Falklands War.

1984: World Area Forecasting Centre status for aviation is accredited to the Met Office.

1985: British scientists detect sharp seasonal reductions in the earth's stratospheric ozone layer.

1986: An explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor leads to the creation of the Nuclear Accident Model which is used to model the dispersion of a wide range of atmospheric pollution problems.

1987: A severe storm inflicts major damage to large areas of southern and south-east England. It leads to a review of forecasting methods and the development of the National Severe Weather Warning Service.

1988: A new supercomputer - the ETA 10 - is installed.

Photo: Opening of the Executive Agency in 1990

1990: The Met Office becomes an Executive Agency of the Ministry of Defence.

M. Neubert, MP and John Houghton, CE with the Executive Agency Framework Document at the opening of the Executive Agency on 2 April 1990

Accurate predictions and warnings are issued by the Met Office for a major storm to cross the UK and parts of north-west Europe during 25 and 26 January.

The Met Office Hadley Centre is opened.

1991: A Cray Y-MP supercomputer is installed and, for the first time, a single numerical model (merging ocean and atmosphere) is used for climate and weather prediction.

1996: A network of European national meteorological services (EUMETNET) is established with the help of the Met Office.

The Met Office becomes a Trading Fund.

1998: Volcanic activity in Iceland releases vast quantities of ash into the atmosphere. The Met Office's dispersion model successfully predicts how it will behave and so averts aircraft disasters.

2001: During the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease the Met Office provides a range of services to Defra and other UK government departments involved in disease control in this country and the near continent.

2002: The Met Office provides guidance and support to senior planners and operational staff for Operation Veritas in Afghanistan. The Mobile Meteorological Unit is deployed to theatre.

With the construction of a new headquarters building in Exeter nearing completion, the Met Office starts a gradual relocation of its entire operation to the new site.

Photo: NEC supercomputer

2003: One of the world's fastest supercomputers - the NEC SX-6 - is installed at the Met Office. It will further improve numerical prediction capability.

For Operation Telic in Iraq the coalition joint operational area forecast is developed with the US. The Mobile Meteorological Unit is deployed to theatre.

During the year it is 'business as usual' as the Met Office continues - and completes - its relocation programme.

Photo: Exeter HQ

2004: The Met Office's new headquarters in Exeter is fully operational.