Sir Francis Beaufort, who spent much of his life sailing tall ships and charting distant bodies of water for the British Navy, was born on May 7, 1774. Hes not famous enough that anyone celebrates his birthday, but hes worth remembering at this time of year for his close observations of the wind.
He entered the navy at age thirteen and by 1805 had risen to the rank of captain. When he became responsible for his own ships log, it occurred to him that a uniform reference system for classifying different winds would offer more concise and useful log entries. So he began to observe his ships behavior.
Beaufort distinguished thirteen different levels of wind based on how his ship with its many sails responded. Zero meant too calm to sail. One through eleven meant winds from just strong enough to sail to winds almost too strong to bear. Twelve meant a wind no canvas could withstand.
In Beauforts day there were no instruments for measuring wind speed. So his observation-based system offered sailors the best way to at least rank the winds they encountered. It was so clear and simple that in 1838 the British Navy required all ships to use it in their logs.
Then, in 1846, came the first anemometer an instrument that could measure exact wind speeds. It didnt take long for wind watchers to see that if the speeds of Beauforts observed winds could be quantified with an anemometer, his scale could be used as a shorthand for wind speeds.
But there were several problems. Not everyone knew sailing ships as well as Beaufort did, so there was a need for new descriptions based on surface features of the sea. Then, of course, there was a need for descriptions that would work on dry land.
Furthermore, because the Beaufort scale was observation-based, its numbers depended on human judgments, making exact wind speed equivalents difficult to quantify. It took until 1926 to get a uniform set of equivalents accepted.
With the high-tech wind instruments available today, the Beaufort scale doesnt get used much anymore. But it still works. Even a child who can describe whats happening to wood smoke and trees can use Mr. Beauforts scale to estimate the speed of a local wind.