Earl Burton was born in Reidsville, North Carolina in 1940. Two things happened in his young life that wound up spinning him into someone legendary: his love of broadcasting, and the volumes of weather records that he began keeping as a teenager. Eventually he came to be an announcer on WREV AM-1220 out of Reidsville.
His flair for radio and his vast knowledge of local meteorology collided one fateful afternoon when Earl was about to relay a forecast from the National Weather Service to his listeners. He was set to read the report calling for rain when he stopped, paused for a moment, and told the audience "Folks, I think that's wrong! I think we are going to see snow!"
It indeed snowed. Earl Burton was right on the money and the professional meteorologists were wrong.
From that point on, Earl was the person to get the weather forecast from if you were in the Reidsville/Eden/greater Rockingham County area. And he had a style all his own when he was giving his prognostication. With that velvety voice perfect for radio, what would take most weather people three or four minutes to share with the audience, Earl would turn that into a seemingly half-hour long masters thesis on atmosphere, humidity, pressure systems and how they were going to meet over the area. And I would say that he was 95% accurate most of the time. Earl had a way of explaining it all, making something as complicated as weather into something that everyone could grasp and appreciate.
I can't talk about Earl Burton without mentioning how beloved he was by the school children.
So many winter days there were when there were rumors of snow coming in. I think every kid in the county would be tuned into 1220 AM and what Earl had to say. It would sometimes take him ten to fifteen minutes to get to the point but if the situation was just right we would hear Earl say the magic words: "this are just the right conditions... for snow!" When he said that, you could pretty much forget about going to school the next day. It simply wasn't going to happen. Earl Burton had said it, we believed it, and fifteen hours later we saw it with our own eyes.
Earl Burton was among the finest personalities in the field of radio. And later on he complemented that with also being the weatherman for Reidsville's WAEU Channel 14 television station. His forecasts on TV were a tad more in keeping with that medium's scheduling but they were no less effective, and for many people it was their very first time putting a face to the voice.
What makes small towns so special are their larger-than-usual percentages of personalities. The people who give a place their true character. Reidsville is fortunate (maybe) to have had many such people over the years. Few of them had as much virtue and qualities as Earl Burton. And to this day, whenever I see a weather forecast calling for snow in an area I happen to be in, I find myself wondering "What would Earl say?"
Earl Burton passed away on February 25th, 2026. He leaves behind a grateful town and generations of school children who hung on his every word on so many winter afternoons.






















