Even as far back as 1892, station siting was a concern

Former California State Climatologist Jim Goodridge sent this along yesterday. This interesting letter from 1892 is a letter from Sergeant James A. Barwick to cooperative weather observers in California. He was concerned about the station siting and exposure conditions and wanted full reports back. The US Army Signal Corp was the original impetus for the US Weather Bureau, now NOAA, hence the reason this is coming from a  sergeant rather than a bureaucrat.

Here’s the cover:

And here is the letter, note the point by point concern over station conditions.

Reader “vigilantfish” provides this transcripton:

US Dept of Agr. Weather Bureau

Sacramento California

October 28, 1892

To all Voluntary observers throughout California,

Gentlemen:

I am instructed by the Chief of the Weather Bureau to ask you the following questions in reference to Instrument Shelter

viz. – 1st Have you an Instrument Shelter that is in actual use, and in which your thermometers are exposed.

2nd: Describe the Kind of Shelter: Is it made of lattice work, four sides latticed and has it the regulation double roof.

3rd Is it exposed on the roof of a building; fastened to a window, or side of a house, or is it located above a grass plat (flat(?)).

4th What is the elevation of the shelter above the roof or ground.

5th Is the shelter supported on 4 posts.

6th Will it not be practicable to have such shelter removed to some open (unreadable) piece of added ground, where the air can circulate freely through it; having the instruments in the shelter face the North, The bottom of the shelter to be about 4 ½ feet above the ground, which would bring the thermometers to about 5 ½ feet above ground, or at the height of the eye of the observer without the sues of steps or platform.

An early answer is most respectfully asked for from every observer.

Very Respectfully,

Your obedient servant,

James A Barwick Observer Weather Bureau and Director California Weather Service.

=============================================================

Note no questions about asphalt, concrete, and the like since those had not become in common use yet.

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Brian H
October 26, 2011 6:23 pm

I agree with Philip M.; “plot”, not “plat” or “flat”.
And I think the scraped word was “field”, which he replaced with the more detailed wording.
I note the emphasis on ‘facing north’, to prevent direct sun on the instruments through the slats. Hadn’t come across that before.

October 26, 2011 6:28 pm

Very interesting. Just from the historical aspect.

Gail Combs
October 26, 2011 6:30 pm

This does not surprise me. The Army has been fine tuning its manuals since Roman times. On Roman Military Matters; A 5th Century Training Manual in Organization, Weapons and Tactics, As Practiced by the Roman Legions
Too bad a Sergeant isn’t still in charge.

Truthseeker
October 26, 2011 7:17 pm

clipe – Obviously you have far too much time on your hands …

October 26, 2011 7:33 pm

Have seen much worse handwriting -mainly medicos
note the word sodded
from free dictionary
sod 1 (sd)
n.
1. A section of grass-covered surface soil held together by matted roots; turf.
2. The ground, especially when covered with grass.
tr.v. sod·ded, sod·ding, sods
To cover with sod.
[Middle English, from Middle Low German or Middle Dutch sode.]
Anthony how many surface stations would be knocked out by the requirement to have the instrument shelter be located in “an open even piece of sodded ground”? For a start that would knock out any shelter located over snow covered ground & all the supposed heating in the Arctic.

October 26, 2011 8:30 pm

@Third Party:
So, was this letter faxed out?
At least in theory it could have been. Various forms of facsimile machines are almost as old as the telegraph. By 1860 pantograph-like devices were available for sending handwriting or drawing directly through the telegraph line, and other devices could scan and read an engraved image. True optical fax machines didn’t come along until 1929, though. Appropriately enough, they were used first for weather maps.
http://www.technikum29.de/en/communication/fax

Pablo an ex Pat
October 26, 2011 8:38 pm

I demand that the Sergeant is called at once to DC to testify to exactly why he was interested in accurate measurements !
If he were a TRUE Scientist he would know that accurate measurement is secondary to modeling. What a buffoon.

Jim Goodridge
October 26, 2011 9:05 pm

That wonderful old James Barwick letter was in an old book that I purchased in Beers Book store in Sacramento many years ago. Barwick had a long career keeping track of California weather records. He prepared the 1897 Climate and Crop report which is still published as the monthly Climatological Data from the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, NC. That series is valued for its historic continuity. Thank you James Barwick

Brian H
October 26, 2011 10:35 pm

Pablo an ex Pat says:
October 26, 2011 at 8:38 pm
I demand that the Sergeant is called at once to DC to testify to exactly why he was interested in accurate measurements !
If he were a TRUE Scientist he would know that accurate measurement is secondary to modeling. What a buffoon*.

*Scroll down to the portrait.

Mike Jowsey
October 26, 2011 10:36 pm

I just love the sign-off. Such admirable humility and gentlemanliness, long lost on the current crop of public servants:

Very Respectfully,
Your obedient servant,
James A Barwick

Hoser
October 26, 2011 10:53 pm

Morse code. Boy Scouts rule!
Sorry about the one-line mess in my previous post. It looked like the line would wrap. %P You can copy and paste elsewhere to play with it (base64).
The text can also be trimmed down to this:
a524c4ed8efb2138835c98e6b002c3dd
Unfortunately, it’s pretty much a one-way transform (an MD5 hash), which makes it perhaps less fun – unless you like puzzles that take a long, long time to solve.

Neil Jones
October 26, 2011 10:56 pm

SNAFU

October 27, 2011 5:47 am

Philip Mulholland says:
October 26, 2011 at 4:31 pm
Plat not Plot

I agree.
Almost all of the letter “o” has the trailing connector at the top of the letter while the letter “a” has the trailing connector coming from a sweep toward the bottom of the letter.
Look at the word “platform” at the end of the paragraph before the closing.
That’s my two cents.

PaulID
October 27, 2011 6:51 am

Brian H says:
October 26, 2011 at 10:35 pm
OK now you owe me a keyboard also you made me wake the wife laughing………too funny wonder how long it will stay there.

Editor
October 27, 2011 6:58 am

Brian H says: October 26, 2011 at 10:35 pm
OK, it’s funny, but given his litigatious nature, I predict it will soon be gone or there will be hell to pay. Oughtta get a screencap while it is still there…..

Editor
October 27, 2011 9:40 am

Plat is probably the right word. Though archaic and not used today, it simply means:
plat Noun: A plot of land.

Gil Dewart
October 27, 2011 10:41 am

Note well that military-meteorological connection again: The National Weather Service started with the Army Signal Corps.

Bill Thomson
October 27, 2011 10:51 am

Kip I agree, I read this kind of stuff and much worse and older on a regular basis, to the extent I almost didn’t notice it wasn’t type script and I too would go with plat.

October 27, 2011 2:21 pm

An imagined, synthesised, Mannian ‘field’ response from a possibly obtuse observer:
“Sorry to report sir, but your previous correspondence was garbled, therefore, request another attempt at transmittal at which time I will do my best to decipher, decode and digest the contents of same after which which I will proceed with either a reply confirming my reception of any second transmittal attempt, or, I may proceed with yet another request for a transmittal should the second transmittal attempt be garbled en route or in decode, decipher or digestion phases of messaging.”
.

Alexander K
October 27, 2011 3:55 pm

‘Plat’, while archaic, remains in use in Southern England as a part of historic street or place names, e.g. ‘Furze Plat’, ‘Mill Plat’, etc.

Jessie
October 28, 2011 5:08 am

clipe says: October 26, 2011 at 4:08 pm
Hmm. Did you use this weblink? http://morsecode.scphillips.com/jtranslator.html
It seems remarkably similar to my effort when I inputted Vigilantfish transcription (minus viz.- ).