Hurricanes Naming
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE , NOAA, National Weather Service
Experience shows that the use of short, distintive given names in written as
well as spoken communications is quicker and less subject to error than the
older more cumbersome latitude-longitute identification methods. These
advantages are specially important in exchanging detailed storm information
between hundres widely scattered stations, coastal bases, and ships at sea.
The use of easily remembered names greatly reduces confusion when two or more
tropical storms occur at the same time. For example, one hurricane can be moving
slowly westward in the Gulf of Mexico , while at exactly the same time anothe
hurricane can be moving rapidly Northward along the Atlantic coast. In the past,
confusion and false rumors have arisen when storm advisories broadcast from
radio statio were mistaken for warning concerning an entirely different storm
located hundreds of miles away.
History of Hurricane Names
For several hundred years many hurricanes in the West Indies were named after
the particular saint's day on which the hurricane occurred. Ivan R. Tannehill
describes in his book "Hurricanes" the major tropical storms of recorded history
and mentions many hurricanes named after saints. For example, there was
"Hurricane Santa Ana" which struck Puerto Rico with exceptional violence on July
26, 1825, and "San Felipe" (the first) and "San Felipe" (the second) which hit
Puerto Rico on September 13 in both 1876 and 1928.
Tannehill also tells of Clement Wragge, an Australian meteorologist who began
giving women's names to tropical storms before the end of the l9th century.
An early example of the use of a woman's name for a storm was in the novel
"Storm" by George R . Stewart, published by Random House in 1941, and since
filmed by Walt Disney. During World War II this practice became widespread in
weather map discussions among forecasters, especially Air Force and Navy
meteorologists who plotted the movements of storms over the wide expanses of the
Pacific Ocean.
In 1953, the United States abandoned as confusing a two-year old plan to name
storms by a phonetic alphabet (Able, Baker, Charlie) when a new, international
phonetic alphabet was introduced. That year, this Nation's weather services
began using female names for storms.
The practice of naming hurricanes solely after women came to an end in 1978
when men's and women's names were included in the Eastern North Pacific storm
lists. In 1979, male and female names were included in lists for the Atlantic
and Gulf of Mexico.
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