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Our History

Operational Meteorology might be said to have begun in Ireland on 8 October
1860, when the first 'real time' weather observation was transmitted
from Valentia Island in Co. Kerry. Valentia Observatory, as it came to be
known,
was one of a network of weather stations established around the Irish
and British coastlines, by the naval authorities in London, to enable storm warnings to be provided for ships
at
sea.
For many years after Independence Ireland's needs, as far as weather
matters were concerned, continued to be met by the British Meteorological
Office. By the mid-1930's, however, it was clear that a new and exciting
customer was on the way. It was the requirement to provide accurate
weather information for transatlantic aviation that led to the formal
establishment of an Irish Meteorological Service in 1936.
The first Director, Austen H. Nagle, was appointed in December of that
year, and installed himself in the small offices in St. Andrew's Street
in Dublin, which became the first Headquarters of the new Service. In
April 1937, the administration of the existing observing network was taken
over from the British Authorities; it comprised 4 telegraphic stations
(at Malin Head, Blacksod Point, Roches Point and Birr), 18 climatological
stations, 172 rainfall stations, and Valentia Observatory, which was the only station
at the time to be manned by official personnel.
In
its early stages, the new Service received continuing help from the British
Authorities. This assistance was in the form of staff seconded from London to work at
Foynes, in Co. Limerick, from where flying boats had just begun to
operate. Included in their number were several who were later to become
well known
internationally; notably Hubert Lamb, the climatologist and Arthur
Davies, Secretary General of the World Meteorological Organisation for
nearly 30
years. By 1941, however, the Service's own recruits had been fully
trained, and the organisation was able to begin satisfying the increasing
demands
for weather information from its own resources.
Forecasting for aviation, first at Foynes and later at Shannon and
Dublin Airports, was the major preoccupation of the early years. By the
late 1940's, however, the Service had broadened its activities. In 1948,
for the first time, it assumed responsibility for the weather forecasts
broadcast by Radio Éireann, which had been provided from London
in the interim. In 1952 it began to supply forecasts to the daily newspapers
and 1961 saw the opening of the new Central Analysis and Forecast Office
in the Headquarters premises, now housed at 44 Upper O'Connell Street,
Dublin. Live presentation by Met Éireann forecasters of the weather
on Teilifis Eireann commenced in early 1962.
The
late 1940's and the 1950's were a time of rapid expansion for the Service.
This period saw the establishment of a balanced nation-wide
network of observing stations, manned on a full-time basis by Meteorological
Service personnel. The climatological and rainfall observing networks
were greatly enhanced, thanks largely to the willing co-operation of
the Garda authorities around the country and the assistance of other
Government Departments and State-sponsored bodies. At Valentia Observatory,
which had moved to a mainland site near Cahirciveen in 1892, upper
air radiosonde measurements began and a wide range of geophysical measurements
and environmental monitoring activities was introduced.
Meanwhile, the Service offered an expanding range of forecast and climatological
information to the public and to specialised interests. A notable development
was the inauguration of tape recorded telephone forecasts during the
1960's, the precursor of today's Weatherdial. The reception of satellite
images began in the late 1960's at Shannon Airport and in the 1970's,
the Meteorological Service might be said to have come of age by entering
the computer era. Initially, the new machines were employed for communication
purposes, but shortly afterwards the computers were used for the relatively
new technique of numerical weather prediction.
Throughout its history, the Meteorological Service and its staff played
an active role in the development of meteorology on the international
scene. Ireland became
a full member of the World Meteorological Organisation shortly after its
establishment in the early 1950's and was later a founder member of both
the European Centre
for Medium Range Weather Forecasts and the European Meteorological Satellite
Organisation, EUMETSAT. More recently, the Service has been active in the
formation of other co-operative agencies like EUMETNET and ECOMET. Particularly
beneficial
to the organisation has been its membership since 1989 of HIRLAM, a co-operative
venture between the Scandinavian countries and several other European Meteorological
Services for the development of a numerical model for short-range forecasting.
The modern era of the Meteorological Service might be said to date from
its occupation of the new Headquarters Building in Glasnevin in 1979,
a development which for the first time allowed all the Dublin based Divisions
to be housed under the same roof. It was around this time too, that the
Service reached its peak in terms of staffing, with a total of 342 in
1980. The intervening years have seen a gradual reduction in staff numbers
to the present level of 230, a development brought about mainly by the
introduction of automated methods for many repetitive tasks, and by on-going
review of our priorities with regard to weather observations.
Since the 1990's, in common with its sister organisations in most other European
countries, the service has adopted a more commercial approach to the provision
of services to its customers,in an effort to try to increase revenue and thus
lighten the financial burden on the tax-payer. This spirit of commercial awareness,
however, has been combined with an enhancement of the Service's public service
role in areas where this has seemed desirable, most notably perhaps by the introduction
of Severe Weather Alerts and by co-operation in the monitoring of stratospheric
and tropospheric ozone
In March of 1996, its 60th year of operation, the Meteorological Service adopted the new title Met Éireann, with the aim of establishing a well-focused corporate identity in the public mind. Proud of its record of public service, its development of the national meteorological infrastructure and its contribution to the science of meteorology, Met Éireann looks forward with confident optimism to the challenges that lie ahead.
Directors of Met Éireann, 1936-present
1936-1948 Austen H. Nagle
1948-1964 Mariano Doporto
1965-1978 P.M. Austin Bourke
1978-1981 P. Kilian Rohan
1981-1988 Donal L. Linehan
1989-present Declan J. Murphy
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