Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
District of Columbia
Related: About this forumDoug Hill, veteran Washington meteorologist, dies at 71
A detailed look back at the life of
@DougHillWx
in this
@postobits
from
@harrisondsmith
: https://washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2021/11/23/doug-hill-dead/
In this picture, he's with
@BobRyanCCM
; the two worked together at
@wjlaweather
from 2010 to 2013.
@DougHillWx
in this
@postobits
from
@harrisondsmith
: https://washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2021/11/23/doug-hill-dead/
In this picture, he's with
@BobRyanCCM
; the two worked together at
@wjlaweather
from 2010 to 2013.
Link to tweet
It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of our dear friend and colleague Doug Hill.
He will be missed dearly by those who knew him and watched his forecasts for decades.
Our deepest sympathies to his wife Mary Ann and their family 💔😢.
https://wjla.com/news/local/doug-hill-obituary-tribute-former-wjla-7news-chief-meteorologist-passes-away-suddenly
He will be missed dearly by those who knew him and watched his forecasts for decades.
Our deepest sympathies to his wife Mary Ann and their family 💔😢.
https://wjla.com/news/local/doug-hill-obituary-tribute-former-wjla-7news-chief-meteorologist-passes-away-suddenly
Link to tweet
Doug Hill, veteran Washington meteorologist, dies at 71
Link to tweet
Obituaries
Doug Hill, veteran Washington meteorologist, dies at 71
By Harrison Smith
Yesterday at 7:06 p.m. EST
For 33 years, Washington meteorologist Doug Hill stepped in front of the green screen to help viewers plan around the weather, guiding them through days of sunshine, rain and seemingly never-ending snow, including during storms with names like Snowpocalypse and Snowmageddon.
With his silver hair, baritone voice and unflappable demeanor, he was a soothing fixture of CBS affiliate WUSA Channel 9 and of WJLA ABC7, where he served as chief meteorologist before retiring in 2017. He also appeared regularly on WTOP-FM, sometimes calling in while he was driving to provide live weather updates.
Mr. Hill was so devoted to the job and so enamored with the weather, even if he never really loved the cold that despite having the flu during the Snowzilla blizzard of 2016, when one to three feet fell across the region, he was on for like 12 hours straight, said Alex Liggitt, the weekend morning meteorologist at ABC7. ... Doug was passionate about getting people prepared for even average weather, his former colleague, meteorologist Bob Ryan, said in a statement, but especially when any weather was dangerous, he was at the top of his game.
Mr. Hill was 71 when he died Nov. 22 at his home in Leland, N.C. His daughter, Maggie Hill, confirmed the death but did not cite a cause.
An Air Force veteran who served for six years in the Prince Georges County Police Department, Mr. Hill took a winding path to meteorology. But he had tracked the weather ever since he was a boy, getting an early introduction to the power of thunderstorms on his seventh birthday, when a backyard celebration at his familys rowhouse in the Baltimore suburbs was forced inside by the sound of thunder.
Barred from going into an inflatable pool that his parents had acquired for the occasion, Mr. Hill said he raised his fist to the heavens and said, God, let lightning strike this house. Moments later, a thunderbolt struck the spot where power lines entered the home. Mr. Hill was chastened but uninjured. ... That changed my life forever, he told the Calvert Recorder of Southern Maryland. There are those that will say that is an odd coincidence. In my world, where I come from, that is not a coincidence.
{snip}
Announcing his retirement from WJLA, Mr. Hill said he wanted to focus on his family and on Christian ministry, including by teaching Sunday school at Chesapeake Church in Huntingtown, Md., and volunteering with End Hunger in Calvert County, a nonprofit organization. ... He had also grown tired of certain aspects of weather forecasting. Retiring meant a whole new lifestyle, he told the Calvert Record: I have been wearing a suit my whole life for five days a week. Its time to move on.
By Harrison Smith
Harrison Smith is a reporter on The Washington Post's obituaries desk. Since joining the obituaries section in 2015, he has profiled big-game hunters, fallen dictators and Olympic champions. He sometimes covers the living as well, and previously co-founded the South Side Weekly, a community newspaper in Chicago. Twitter https://twitter.com/harrisondsmith
Doug Hill, veteran Washington meteorologist, dies at 71
By Harrison Smith
Yesterday at 7:06 p.m. EST
For 33 years, Washington meteorologist Doug Hill stepped in front of the green screen to help viewers plan around the weather, guiding them through days of sunshine, rain and seemingly never-ending snow, including during storms with names like Snowpocalypse and Snowmageddon.
With his silver hair, baritone voice and unflappable demeanor, he was a soothing fixture of CBS affiliate WUSA Channel 9 and of WJLA ABC7, where he served as chief meteorologist before retiring in 2017. He also appeared regularly on WTOP-FM, sometimes calling in while he was driving to provide live weather updates.
Mr. Hill was so devoted to the job and so enamored with the weather, even if he never really loved the cold that despite having the flu during the Snowzilla blizzard of 2016, when one to three feet fell across the region, he was on for like 12 hours straight, said Alex Liggitt, the weekend morning meteorologist at ABC7. ... Doug was passionate about getting people prepared for even average weather, his former colleague, meteorologist Bob Ryan, said in a statement, but especially when any weather was dangerous, he was at the top of his game.
Mr. Hill was 71 when he died Nov. 22 at his home in Leland, N.C. His daughter, Maggie Hill, confirmed the death but did not cite a cause.
An Air Force veteran who served for six years in the Prince Georges County Police Department, Mr. Hill took a winding path to meteorology. But he had tracked the weather ever since he was a boy, getting an early introduction to the power of thunderstorms on his seventh birthday, when a backyard celebration at his familys rowhouse in the Baltimore suburbs was forced inside by the sound of thunder.
Barred from going into an inflatable pool that his parents had acquired for the occasion, Mr. Hill said he raised his fist to the heavens and said, God, let lightning strike this house. Moments later, a thunderbolt struck the spot where power lines entered the home. Mr. Hill was chastened but uninjured. ... That changed my life forever, he told the Calvert Recorder of Southern Maryland. There are those that will say that is an odd coincidence. In my world, where I come from, that is not a coincidence.
{snip}
Announcing his retirement from WJLA, Mr. Hill said he wanted to focus on his family and on Christian ministry, including by teaching Sunday school at Chesapeake Church in Huntingtown, Md., and volunteering with End Hunger in Calvert County, a nonprofit organization. ... He had also grown tired of certain aspects of weather forecasting. Retiring meant a whole new lifestyle, he told the Calvert Record: I have been wearing a suit my whole life for five days a week. Its time to move on.
By Harrison Smith
Harrison Smith is a reporter on The Washington Post's obituaries desk. Since joining the obituaries section in 2015, he has profiled big-game hunters, fallen dictators and Olympic champions. He sometimes covers the living as well, and previously co-founded the South Side Weekly, a community newspaper in Chicago. Twitter https://twitter.com/harrisondsmith
InfoView thread info, including edit history
TrashPut this thread in your Trash Can (My DU » Trash Can)
BookmarkAdd this thread to your Bookmarks (My DU » Bookmarks)
2 replies, 1620 views
ShareGet links to this post and/or share on social media
AlertAlert this post for a rule violation
PowersThere are no powers you can use on this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
ReplyReply to this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
Rec (2)
ReplyReply to this post
2 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Doug Hill, veteran Washington meteorologist, dies at 71 (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Nov 2021
OP
appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)1. Sympathies & many thanks, I remember the team well.
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,969 posts)2. At DCRTV:
http://www.dcrtv.com/ {the mailbag}
|| November 23 ||
NEWS! From wtop.com. Present and former colleagues on Tuesday remembered Doug Hill, who died Monday after having been a meteorologist in the D.C. area for more than 30 years. Longtime D.C.-area meteorologist Doug Hill has died. Hill spent more than 17 years at WJLA and more than 15 years on WTOP before retiring to North Carolina with his wife, Mary Ann, in 2017. He spent 16 years before that at WUSA. His good friend, WJLA meteorologist Steve Rudin, told WTOP that Hill was a fiercely private person, was living his best life and passed after a short illness. Just before 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Rudin on the air called Hill a former colleague, mentor and friend and described him as the best of the best one of the most popular and familiar faces on local television. Rudin added that Doug lived modestly [and] donated generously, especially to causes to end food insecurity. He adored his family. May his memory be a blessing. Later in the day, he told WTOP that Doug was a big deal, but Doug didnt act like he was a big deal, Rudin told WTOP later in the day. He said he had seen Hill on TV in Detroit when he was 10 years old, and was stunned when he got to come to D.C. and work with him. Storm Team 4 meteorologist Lauryn Ricketts also watched Hill as a kid, and she said on Tuesday Doug Hill has been a part of my life from the very beginning, whether he knows that or not although I reminded him several times when I worked with him over six years. Ricketts recounted a story of Hills leadership that had nothing to do with the weather: She was working at WJLA during my first deployment as a military girlfriend, and told Hill that my boyfriend at the time, now my husband, had just gotten back from the first deployment that we spent apart together. And I was telling Doug, and Doug was like, You should leave work right now and go down to North Carolina and surprise him when he gets home. And I still had two days of work left, including that full day. And Doug was in the military I mean, he got his training in the Air Force. So he knew, and I was so grateful for that. And it almost makes me tear up when I think about it, because he didnt have to do that. But he was just such a good leader and just such a good mentor. And I loved him for it. Leon Harris, an anchor at NBC Washington who spent 13 years at WJLA with Hill, said on Tuesday that getting the news about Hill was a punch in the stomach. He described the weatherman as a man of family and faith who acted as a patriarch to the rest of the WJLA weather team. He treated everybody who worked with him like they were his child, like they were his family, Harris said. He was just that kind of guy. Harris added that Hill loved a healthy debate about politics, sports or whatever: He would argue with me about anything. He remembered that people would follow Hill from one station to another. It wasnt the station; it was the guy, Harris said. Hill didnt just give the weather on WTOP for 15 years, Harris said he was instrumental in developing a partnership between the two stations. The connection that you have with listeners is a really, really intimate connection, Harris said. And he liked being part of that. It was something that was really, really key to him, was trying to find a way to connect with the people who listen. And he wanted to deliver for them every single day. Retired WJLA anchor Gordon Peterson said Hill was serious about his work, but he had a delightful sense of humor. I used to tease him about the meteorology terms hed use Id say, Oh no, not a wintery mix! Hed say, We have a backdoor front coming. Id say, A what? And he handled it great. Longtime NBC Washington meteorologist Bob Ryan was a competitor and a colleague of Hills for 40 years, and on Tuesday he said, Doug was passionate about getting people prepared for even average weather, but especially when any weather was dangerous, he was at the top of his game. Ryan said Hill was a family man and a man of faith, and called him a person we all should think about, pray for and try to emulate better. Hill was an Air Force veteran and a Prince Georges County, Maryland, police officer before becoming a broadcaster. He began his TV career in Richmond in 1978, with a stint in Detroit in the 1980s before coming back to D.C. in 1984, WJLA said on the occasion of his retirement. He retired in order to spend more time with his family and on his church, WJLA said at the time. Hill told the station at his retirement, Ive been very fortunate to make a career out of a childhood hobby. I love what Ive been able to do here at ABC7 and I love the people Ive worked with over the years. He added, Ive been given a great platform to use my talents in meteorology; now, Im going to dedicate those gifts to Christian ministry and focus on my family. Im looking forward to the next chapter in my life and am privileged to have ABC7s full support. Hill is survived by his wife and four children.
NEWS! From wtop.com. Present and former colleagues on Tuesday remembered Doug Hill, who died Monday after having been a meteorologist in the D.C. area for more than 30 years. Longtime D.C.-area meteorologist Doug Hill has died. Hill spent more than 17 years at WJLA and more than 15 years on WTOP before retiring to North Carolina with his wife, Mary Ann, in 2017. He spent 16 years before that at WUSA. His good friend, WJLA meteorologist Steve Rudin, told WTOP that Hill was a fiercely private person, was living his best life and passed after a short illness. Just before 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Rudin on the air called Hill a former colleague, mentor and friend and described him as the best of the best one of the most popular and familiar faces on local television. Rudin added that Doug lived modestly [and] donated generously, especially to causes to end food insecurity. He adored his family. May his memory be a blessing. Later in the day, he told WTOP that Doug was a big deal, but Doug didnt act like he was a big deal, Rudin told WTOP later in the day. He said he had seen Hill on TV in Detroit when he was 10 years old, and was stunned when he got to come to D.C. and work with him. Storm Team 4 meteorologist Lauryn Ricketts also watched Hill as a kid, and she said on Tuesday Doug Hill has been a part of my life from the very beginning, whether he knows that or not although I reminded him several times when I worked with him over six years. Ricketts recounted a story of Hills leadership that had nothing to do with the weather: She was working at WJLA during my first deployment as a military girlfriend, and told Hill that my boyfriend at the time, now my husband, had just gotten back from the first deployment that we spent apart together. And I was telling Doug, and Doug was like, You should leave work right now and go down to North Carolina and surprise him when he gets home. And I still had two days of work left, including that full day. And Doug was in the military I mean, he got his training in the Air Force. So he knew, and I was so grateful for that. And it almost makes me tear up when I think about it, because he didnt have to do that. But he was just such a good leader and just such a good mentor. And I loved him for it. Leon Harris, an anchor at NBC Washington who spent 13 years at WJLA with Hill, said on Tuesday that getting the news about Hill was a punch in the stomach. He described the weatherman as a man of family and faith who acted as a patriarch to the rest of the WJLA weather team. He treated everybody who worked with him like they were his child, like they were his family, Harris said. He was just that kind of guy. Harris added that Hill loved a healthy debate about politics, sports or whatever: He would argue with me about anything. He remembered that people would follow Hill from one station to another. It wasnt the station; it was the guy, Harris said. Hill didnt just give the weather on WTOP for 15 years, Harris said he was instrumental in developing a partnership between the two stations. The connection that you have with listeners is a really, really intimate connection, Harris said. And he liked being part of that. It was something that was really, really key to him, was trying to find a way to connect with the people who listen. And he wanted to deliver for them every single day. Retired WJLA anchor Gordon Peterson said Hill was serious about his work, but he had a delightful sense of humor. I used to tease him about the meteorology terms hed use Id say, Oh no, not a wintery mix! Hed say, We have a backdoor front coming. Id say, A what? And he handled it great. Longtime NBC Washington meteorologist Bob Ryan was a competitor and a colleague of Hills for 40 years, and on Tuesday he said, Doug was passionate about getting people prepared for even average weather, but especially when any weather was dangerous, he was at the top of his game. Ryan said Hill was a family man and a man of faith, and called him a person we all should think about, pray for and try to emulate better. Hill was an Air Force veteran and a Prince Georges County, Maryland, police officer before becoming a broadcaster. He began his TV career in Richmond in 1978, with a stint in Detroit in the 1980s before coming back to D.C. in 1984, WJLA said on the occasion of his retirement. He retired in order to spend more time with his family and on his church, WJLA said at the time. Hill told the station at his retirement, Ive been very fortunate to make a career out of a childhood hobby. I love what Ive been able to do here at ABC7 and I love the people Ive worked with over the years. He added, Ive been given a great platform to use my talents in meteorology; now, Im going to dedicate those gifts to Christian ministry and focus on my family. Im looking forward to the next chapter in my life and am privileged to have ABC7s full support. Hill is survived by his wife and four children.