AnnualReport-1926 — Page 189

Administrative Reports 行政報告書 All AI Reviewed

F9-

Weather Telegrams from Ships by Radio.-The following table gives the monthly number of ships from which radio meteorological messages have been received, and the number of messages received (each arrival and departure is counted separately):-

Month. British (including H.M. Ships). Other Nationalities. Total Ships. Messages. Ships. Messages. Ships. Messages. January, 67 586 55 158 122 744 February, 74 638 53 161 127 799 March, 91 667 54 172 145 839 April, 82 474 45 134 127 608 May, 73 374 45 136 118 510 June, 72 509 68 195 140 704 July, 97 288 97 230 194 518 August, 116 378 91 258 207 636 September, 98 275 64 205 162 480 October, 116 444 96 266 212 710 November, 90 340 77 228 167 568 December, 82 243 86 233 168 476 Totals 1926, 1058 5216 831 2376 1889 7592 1925, 687 2199 752 1762 1439 3961 1924, 663 1703 852 1667 1517 3370 1923, 196 409 431 698 627 1107 1922, 280 732 369 702 649 1434

It will be seen that the number of British ships sending these messages increased from 687 in 1925, to 1058 in 1926. This was due in a large measure to the co-operation of the Navy, mentioned in a previous paragraph. The number of ships of other nationalities increased from 752 in 1925 to 831 in 1926 and the number of messages received from these ships increased from 1762 to 2376, an appreciable increase, but still representing only a small percentage of the ships within call of Hong Kong.

An appeal for regular observations from ships has been made through the International Commission for Maritime Meteorology.

Edit History

2026-05-07 12:05:49 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
F9- Weather Telegrams from Ships by Radio.-The following table gives the monthly number of ships from which radio meteorological messages have been received, and the number of messages received (each arrival and departure is counted separately):- Month. British (including H.M. Ships). Other Nationalities. Total Ships. Messages. Ships. Messages. Ships. Messages. January, 67 586 55 158 122 744 February, 74 638 53 161 127 799 March, 91 667 54 172 145 839 April, 82 474 45 134 127 608 May, 73 374 45 136 118 510 June, 72 509 68 195 140 704 July, 97 288 97 230 194 518 August, 116 378 91 258 207 636 September, 98 275 64 205 162 480 October, 116 444 96 266 212 710 November, 90 340 77 228 167 568 December, 82 243 86 233 168 476 Totals 1926, 1058 5216 831 2376 1889 7592 1925, 687 2199 752 1762 1439 3961 1924, 663 1703 852 1667 1517 3370 1923, 196 409 431 698 627 1107 1922, 280 732 369 702 649 1434 It will be seen that the number of British ships sending these messages increased from 687 in 1925, to 1058 in 1926. This was due in a large measure to the co-operation of the Navy, mentioned in a previous paragraph. The number of ships of other nationalities increased from 752 in 1925 to 831 in 1926 and the number of messages received from these ships increased from 1762 to 2376, an appreciable increase, but still representing only a small percentage of the ships within call of Hong Kong. An appeal for regular observations from ships has been made through the International Commission for Maritime Meteorology.
Baseline (Original)
F9- Weather Telegrams from Ships by Radio.-The following table gives the monthly number of ships from which radio meteorological messages have been received, and the number of messages received (each arrival and departure is counted separately):- Month. British (including H.M. Other National- ities. Total Ships). January, 67 586 55 158 122 744 February, 74 638 53 161 127 799 March, 91 667 54 172 145 839 April, 82 474 45 134 127 508 May, 73 374 45 136 118 510 June, 72 509 68 195 140 704 July, 97 288 97 230 194 757 August, 116 378 91 258 207 859 September, 98 275 64 205 162 652 October,.. 116 444 96 266 212. 926 November,. 90 340 77 228 167 779 December, 82 243 86 233 168 706 (1926, 1058 5216 831 2376 | 1889 | 8883 1925, 687 2199 | 752 1762 1439 | 3961 Totals 1924, 663 1703 852 1667 1517 3370 1923, 196 409 431 698 627 1107 1922, 280 732 369 702 649 1434 It will be seen that the number of British ships sending these messages increased from 687 in 1925, to 1058 in 1926. This was due in a large measure to the co-operation of the Navy, mentioned in a previous paragraph. The number of ships of other nationalities increased from 752 in 1925 to 831 in 1926 and the number of messages received from these ships increased from 1762 to 2376, an appreciable increase, but still representing only a small percentage of the ships within call of Hong Kong. An appeal for regular observations from ships has been made. through the International Commission for Maritime Meteorology.
2026-05-07 12:05:49 · Baseline
View content

F9-

Weather Telegrams from Ships by Radio.-The following table gives the monthly number of ships from which radio meteorological messages have been received, and the number of messages received (each arrival and departure is counted separately):-

Month.

British (including H.M.

Other National- ities.

Total

Ships).

January,

67

586

55

158

122

744

February,

74 638

53

161

127

799

March,

91

667

54

172

145

839

April,

82

474

45

134

127

508

May,

73

374 45

136

118

510

June,

72 509

68

195

140

704

July,

97 288

97

230

194

757

August,

116

378

91 258

207

859

September,

98

275

64

205

162

652

October,..

116

444

96 266

212.

926

November,.

90

340

77

228

167

779

December,

82

243

86

233

168

706

(1926,

1058

5216 831

2376 | 1889 | 8883

1925,

687

2199 | 752

1762

1439 | 3961

Totals 1924,

663

1703 852

1667 1517

3370

1923,

196

409 431

698 627 1107

1922,

280

732 369

702 649

1434

It will be seen that the number of British ships sending these messages increased from 687 in 1925, to 1058 in 1926. This was due in a large measure to the co-operation of the Navy, mentioned in a previous paragraph. The number of ships of other nationalities increased from 752 in 1925 to 831 in 1926 and the number of messages received from these ships increased from 1762 to 2376, an appreciable increase, but still representing only a small percentage of the ships within call of Hong Kong.

An appeal for regular observations from ships has been made. through the International Commission for Maritime Meteorology.

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.