Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Howie Bluestein
Wed Jun 11, 2003

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New England's worst twister, the Worcester Tornado struck fifty years ago this week. That storm caught the attention of a little boy in a nearby town. Bob Henson has the story.

For over 20 years Howie Bluestein has been a professor, researcher, and storm chaser at the University of Oklahoma. His work helped inspire the movie "Twister." But Bluestein was a mere lad on June 9, 1953, when a massive tornado struck Worcester, Massachusetts.

HB: I was about 5 years old and living north of Boston, and I remember that I was outside doing what five-year-olds do--I was playing. And my mother called me in the house--she was a little frantic, I think. The sky was sort of yellowish and very hazy. It looked a little bit different than the way it usually looks. And my mother said, "Come in the house--there's a tornado" and to entice me in the house, she told me that it lifts little boys up and carries them away. I'm not sure I believed that, and I don't think I wanted to come back in the house, but I distinctly remember that happening.

The Worcester tornado wasn't the only storm to intrigue Bluestein.

HB: I think that the Worcester tornado certainly got me excited about weather, but then so did New England snowstorms, and we had several hurricanes pass by Boston the following year. But we also had lightning strike the antenna of our TV and I watched a television explode in front of my face once. So the Worcester tornado was one in a series of exciting weather events that caught my fancy.

Bob Henson brought this story to us from Boulder, Colorado. The Weather Notebook receives funding from Subaru of America, and The National Science Foundation.




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