词条 | George Winterling |
释义 |
| name = George Winterling | birthname = George Alfred Winterling | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1931|09|01}} | birth_place = Pine Beach, New Jersey | death_date = | death_place = | image = | occupation = Meteorologist, Teacher | alias = | title = WJXT Meteorologist Emeritus | family = | spouse = Virginia C. Winterling | children = Wendy Gale, Frank, Steve | relatives = | salary = | networth = | credits = Evening Weather Anchor/Chief Meteorologist for WJXT }}George Alfred Winterling (born September 1, 1931) is a retired television weatherman. He was the creator of the "heat index". Chief Meteorologist for television station WJXT in Jacksonville, Florida for almost fifty years,[1] Winterling helped develop modern forecasting.[2] EducationWinterling was born in New Jersey, but moved with his family to Jacksonville at age 10. He graduated from Robert E. Lee High School[3] in 1949 and joined the United States Air Force. After discovering that cadet training required two years of college, he chose meteorology and was sent to Weather Observers School at Chanute Air Force Base in Rantoul, Illinois. He was stationed for a year at Turner Air Force Base in Albany, Georgia, then attended Intermediate Meteorology School at Oklahoma A&M in Stillwater. He was posted to Shemya Air Force Base in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska where he observed the Pacific Ocean's killer storms.[2] After leaving the service in 1954, he attended Jacksonville Junior College (now Jacksonville University), transferred to Florida State University and earned a meteorology degree in 1957. He was initially employed by the United States Weather Bureau (now known as the National Weather Service) and stayed there for five years. Hurricane Donna was a major 1960 hurricane which made landfall at Marathon, moved into the Gulf of Mexico, came ashore north of Naples, crossed the state and returned to the Atlantic Ocean at Daytona Beach before skirting the east coast all the way to Canada. Over 17 days, the storm was responsible for over 350 deaths and $900 million in damages. The hurricane piqued Winterling's interest. It convinced him that "the media needed knowledgeable persons doing weathercasts in times of emergencies" such as hurricanes.[2][4]BroadcastingIn 1962, Winterling approached WJXT management with a new idea: add a meteorologist to the news broadcast to present a weather forecast. The idea was accepted and he was hired for the job. Less than two years later, Winterling was the only local forecaster to warn Jacksonville residents that Hurricane Dora would make landfall on the First Coast.[1][5] Winterling has been a member of the American Meteorological Society (AMS) since 1963 and his broadcasts carried their Seal of Approval. In the early days before satellite pictures, he created and copyrighted the space-view maps to portray weather systems across the country, and began the practice of predicting rainfall probability. In 1969, Winterling was appointed to the Board of Radio and Television Weathercasting and redesigned the AMS Seal of Approval during 1973. He was employed by Jacksonville University as an adjunct professor beginning in 1975, teaching meteorology through 1994. To account for the combination of summer heat and humidity, he created the "humiture" calculation in 1978, which the National Weather Service adopted as heat index the following year. Winterling received an outstanding service award from the AMS in 1984 for his use of animation to enable viewers to better understand weather phenomenon. He became a Certified Consulting Meteorologist after passing the AMS exam in 1989.[2] Semi-retirementBeginning in March 2009, the station began promoting "The Big Secret". On April 23, 2009, WJXT's general manager, Bob Ellis, revealed that Winterling was going into semi-retirement. While he would no longer appear on the daily newscasts, he would fill in when the station's other weatherpeople were on vacation and also serve as a severe weather expert during hurricanes. Winterling stated that he would have more time for community events and appearances at schools and civic organizations, which he claimed to enjoy. He noted that in the early years, there were occasions when he needed to alert viewers to severe weather conditions, but the network's broadcast rules did not permit the interruption of programs. Television weather forecasting had advanced immeasurably from when his only tools were a rain gauge, thermometer, anemometer and wind vane. Today, computers and satellites are the primary tools.[1] Ellis commented:
May 20, 2009 was Winterling's last appearance as weather anchor on the 6:00 news show. On June 23, 2009, the Jacksonville City Council passed Resolution 2009-396-A "RECOGNIZING AND COMMENDING GEORGE WINTERLING FOR HIS FORTY-SEVEN YEARS OF DEDICATED PUBLIC SERVICE AS CHIEF METEOROLOGIST AT WJXT" and honored him with a standing ovation.[5]
He returned to WJXT to broadcast the weather shortly after recovering from Cardiac Arrest for one broadcast during their morning show on November 21, 2011.[6] GardenWinterling was also known for his gardening skills. His interest in gardening began with his mother's victory garden during World War II.[7] He maintained a garden at his home, and shared pictures and produce with other employees. WJXT's station manager suggested that he begin a garden at the station in 1991 and they created a weekly segment called George's Garden, which offered advice on when to plant, what to grow, watering and fertilization.[2] For nearly 12 years, Winterling delivered the 6:00 weather live from the garden each Thursday during the growing season. Eventually, George began taping the show early to avoid bad weather and changing clothes between broadcasts. Even after his retirement, Winterling assured his fans, “I’ll still be around. I can’t get away from the garden.”[1][7] FamilyGeorge and his wife Virginia were married in 1956 and have 3 children (Wendy Gale, Frank, & Steve) and several grandchildren. For their golden wedding anniversary, they traveled to Alaska to revisit the base where George was stationed in 1953. They reside in the Mandarin area of Jacksonville.[2][8] References1. ^1 2 3 4 Kerr, Jessie-Lynn: "After nearly 50 years, TV-4's Winterling leaves daily duties" Florida Times-Union, April 24, 2009 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 "George Winterling: A Lifelong Passion For Weather" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090917055259/http://www.news4jax.com/news/19262258/detail.html |date=2009-09-17 }} WJXT Channel 4, April 23, 2009 3. ^" School History" Duval County Public Schools, Lee High School 4. ^Winterling, George: "GEORGE WINTERLING'S SHEMYA SCRAPBOOK 1953" Shemya Post-WWII scrapbooks 5. ^1 2 "City Council Honors George Winterling" WJXT News, June 23, 2009 6. ^"George Winterling talks about recovery, week's weather" WJXT News, November 21, 2011 7. ^1 Brockwell, Kent Jennings: "George Winterling" Jax Daily Record, May 20, 2005 8. ^"George Winterling" Peoplesmart External links
9 : American television journalists|Television anchors from Jacksonville, Florida|1931 births|Living people|People from Jacksonville, Florida|People from Pine Beach, New Jersey|Florida State University alumni|Jacksonville University alumni|American male journalists |
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