During March of 1948 Tinker Air Force Base was hit directly by two tornadoe
s during a period of only five days. The first tornado was the most destruc
tive, to that point, ever to occur in Oklahoma. The second storm caused con
siderable additional damage and was remarkable in another, more significant
, way. The first operational tornado forecast had been issued by Air Force
Officers E. J. Fawbush and R. C. Miller a few hours before the tornado move
d across the base. This extremely unusual meteorological situation, two tor
nadoes hitting the same location within five days, coupled with the fortuit
ous forecast of the event, had a profound impact on the evolution of operat
ional severe weather forecasting in the United States. These events eventua
lly stimulated the initiation of public severe by the Weather Bureau.
Miller often presented anecdotal accounts of the events leading up to the l
andmark forecast, for example, in seminars and interviews during a visit to
the National Severe Storms Laboratory during March 1994. He often stressed
that the remarkable similarity of the synoptic settings on 21 and 25 March
1918 helped give him and Fawbush the courage to issue the now famous forec
ast. In this paper the synoptic environments that led to the two tornado oc
currences at Tinker are analyzed and discussed. There were indeed similarit
ies; however. it is surprising how different many aspects of the storm sett
ings actually were. Similarities and important differences are illustrated
with a series of synoptic surface and upper-air charts. it is likely that d
evelopment of a base severe weather plan following the tornado disaster of
20 March, in addition to the presence and exhortations of General E S. Boru
m at the base weather station on 25 March, provided as great a motivation f
or the first tornado forecast as did the similarity of the synoptic setting
s.