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Our founding father

 

Robert FitzRoy

 

In 1854 a well respected and distinguished naval sea captain was chosen to head up a new, experimental government department within the Board of Trade. That department was, what is now known as, the Met Office, and that captain was Robert FitzRoy.

Photo: Captain (later Rear-Admiral) Robert FitzRoy It was his drive and knowledge of the effects of weather that resulted in major developments in the area of meteorology, which continue today. Although he was not responsible for initially setting up the department, FitzRoy is now regarded as the Met Office's founding father. He was the world's first full-time weather forecaster and invented the term 'weather forecast'.

Background

Robert FitzRoy was born into an aristocratic family, at Ampton Hall in Suffolk in 1805. He joined the Royal Navy at the age of 14 and his early career was spent surveying the coasts of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, but it is a voyage he made in 1831 for which he is best known.

In command of HMS Beagle, and with the naturalist Charles Darwin on board, he embarked on the five-year round-the-world voyage that was the inspiration for Darwin's epoch-making 'The Origin of Species', eventually published in 1859. Although they later fell out, Darwin described Captain FitzRoy as '…a very extraordinary person….' and compared him to Napoleon and Nelson.

In 1841 FitzRoy was elected as Member of Parliament for Durham and was made the Governor General of New Zealand in 1843 - although he was later dismissed.

Throughout his naval career FitzRoy had always been keenly interested in the weather and in 1854 he was appointed 'Meteorological Statist' - charged with establishing meteorology as a science.

It was FitzRoy who developed the fundamental techniques of modern weather forecasting. His work was pivotal to the development of storm warnings; he pioneered the printing of a daily weather forecast in newspapers and he even designed a standard barometer, which was named after him. In 1862 he published 'The Weather Book' which described his theories and methods.

But criticism of his methods started to be made by Parliament, other scientists and in the media. In 1865, depressed and in ill health he took his own life.

However, his legacy and memory lives on. In February 2002 the sea area Finisterre was renamed FitzRoy and in Exeter the Met Office's headquarters is situated on FitzRoy Road.

More about the history of the Met Office