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Rarely in the UK - or anywhere, for that matter
- is a train completely buried in snow. But that's
exactly what happened on Dartmoor in March 1891 and
in northern Scotland in January 1978. The winters
that produced such phenomenal snowstorms were not,
however, generally snowy - unlike the remarkable winter
of 1947, the snowiest since 1814.
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Fig 1: A car stuck in snow at Hebden
Bridge – 1963
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Since daily meteorological records began in Britain
in the 17th century, there have been a number of severe
winters. The coldest of all was probably 1684, when
the diarist John Evelyn took a coach to Lambeth along
the frozen River Thames.
There was an exceptionally cold and protracted winter
in 1739/40 when, between November 1739 and May 1740,
snow fell on 39 days in the London area. January in
both 1795 and 1814 were colder than January 1740,
and the month of February in 1855, 1895 and 1947 were
colder than February 1740.
England and Wales would have to wait 223 years for
a winter as cold as 1740: 1963.
But what was so remarkable about the 1739/40, however,
is that the mean temperatures of both January and
February were below 0 °C in the Midlands and southern
England. The only other known instance of two successive
months with mean temperatures below freezing took
place in December 1878 and January 1879.
From 22 January to 17 March in 1947, snow fell every
day somewhere in the UK, with the weather so cold
that the snow accumulated. The temperature seldom
rose more than a degree or two above freezing.
There were several snowfalls of 60 cm or more, and
depths of level snow reached 150 cm in upper Teesdale
and the Denbighshire Hills. Across Britain, drifts
more than five metres deep blocked roads and railways.
People were cut off for days. The armed services dropped
supplies by helicopter to isolated farmsteads and
villages, and helped to clear roads and railways.
In mid January 1947, no-one expected the winter to
go down in the annals as the snowiest since 1814 and
among the coldest on record. After two cold spells
that had failed to last - one before Christmas 1946,
the other during the first week of January - the weather
had turned unseasonably mild.
During the night of 15-16 January, the temperature
at Leeming in North Yorkshire didn't fall below 11.7
°C. The following day, maximum temperatures close
to 14 °C were recorded in Norfolk, Herefordshire and
Flintshire. All this was soon to change.
An area of high pressure moved northwards from France
on 18 January. Two days later, the anticyclone was
centred off north-west Norway. It then drifted south-east
to southern Scandinavia, and dominated weather over
the British Isles for the rest of the month. The first
night frost came on the 20th and the winter began
in earnest on the 23rd, when snow fell heavily over
the south and south-west of England. Even in the Isles
of Scilly, a few centimetres of snow fell. The blizzard
in south-west England was the worst since 1891; many
villages in Devon were isolated.
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Fig 2: 0600 UTC on 31 January
1947. A low near the channel islands and high
over southern Scandinavia, a typical pressure
situation during the 1947 winter. Occlusion giving
snow over southern counties of England. |
| Unrelenting
harsh weather |
The cold, snowy weather continued through February and
into March. Any breaks in the cold weather were short-lived.
- On no day in February 1947 did the temperature
at Kew Observatory top 4.4 °C, and only twice in
the month was the night minimum temperature above
0 °C
- The mean maximum temperature for the month was
0.5 °C (6.9 °C below average) and the mean minimum
was -2.7 °C (4.6 °C below average)
- On 26 of the month's 28 days, snow was lying at
0900 UTC
- South of a line from The Wash to the River Dee,
mean maximum temperatures were everywhere more than
5.5 °C below average and, in some places, more than
7 °C below average
- Mean minimum temperatures were more than 4 °C
below average everywhere in the south and south-west
of England, and almost 6 °C below average in some
places
February 1947 was the coldest February on record
in many places and, for its combination of low temperatures
with heavy snow, bore comparison with January 1814.
One notable feature of February 1947 was the lack
of precipitation in parts of western Scotland. Because
of the persistent anticyclonic conditions, some places
that were normally very wet had no rain at all. A
completely dry month in western Scotland is unusual.
It was unprecedented in February.
Another unusual feature of February 1947 was the
lack of sunshine in the Midlands and south of England
- a complete contrast to the north-west of Scotland,
where the weather was unusually sunny.
At Kew, Nottingham and Edgbaston, there was no sun
on 22 of the month's 28 days. At Kew, there was none
at all from the 2nd to the 22nd. Hardly anywhere in
the Midlands and southern England did the sunshine
totals for the month exceed 40 per cent of average.
When skies did clear, night-time temperatures plunged.
A minimum of -21 °C was recorded at Woburn in Bedfordshire
early on 25 February. Without the cloud, the month
would almost certainly have been even colder than
it was, certainly at night.
| More snow,
flooding and then gales |
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In some parts of the British Isles, snow fell
on as many as 26 days in February 1947. Much
of the snow was powdery and was soon whipped
into deep drifts by strong winds.
If February hadn't been enough, March was even
worse. In the first half of the month, there
were more gales and heavy snowstorms.
On 4 and 5 March, heavy snow fell over most of
England and Wales, with severe drifting. On 6 March,
drifts were five metres deep in the Pennines and
three metres deep in the Chilterns. In some places,
glazed frost occurred. On 10 and 11 March, southern
Scotland had its heaviest snowfall of the winter,
and the snowstorm reached the Scottish Highlands,
where, on 12 March, drifts more than seven metres
deep were reported.
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Fig 3:
The flooding of 1947
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Meanwhile, mild air with a temperature of 7-10 °C
edged into the extreme south-west of the British Isles
on 10 March, bringing rain. The ensuing thaw was rapid.
By the evening of 11 March, vast areas of southern
England were under water. After weeks of frost, the
ground was frozen hard. The rain and meltwater couldn't
soak into the ground. Surface run-off was the only
option.
The warm air spread northwards and eastwards. Meltwater
from the Welsh mountains poured into the valleys of
the Severn and Wye, flooding Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
The rivers of the English Midlands burst their banks.
By 13 March, Fenland rivers were close to overspilling.
On 15 March, a deepening depression from the Atlantic
approached the British Isles, bringing rain and severe
gales. During the afternoon of 16 March, mean winds
over southern England reached 50 knots, with gusts
of 80-90 knots.
Buildings were damaged and waves were whipped up
on floodwaters. In East Anglia, where the major rivers
flow north-eastwards, the south-westerly wind drove
water before it and waves pounded the dykes. Water
levels rose and the dykes gave way. Most of Fenland
was inundated. Troops were called in, but they could
do little to stop water pouring through the breached
dykes.
River levels rose relentlessly. For example, the
banks of the Trent burst at Nottingham on 18 March
and hundreds of homes were flooded, many to first
floor level. When floodwater reached the tidal part
of the Trent, it was impeded by a spring tide, and
the whole of the lower Trent valley was flooded.
The floods in the West Country subsided after 20
March, but rivers continued to rise in eastern England.
The Wharfe, Derwent, Aire and Ouse all burst their
banks and flooded a huge area of southern Yorkshire.
The town of Selby was almost completely under water.
Only the ancient abbey and a few streets around the
market place escaped inundation. Seventy per cent
of all houses in the town were flooded.
The cold and snowy weather had, at last, ended, but
the misery of the floods continued into the spring.
And to make matters worse, the severe difficulties
caused by the winter of 1947 were aggravated by the
fuel and food shortages that remained after the Second
World War.

Fig 4: Maximum
and minimum temperatures
Edgbaston, Warwickshire 15 Dec 1946-16 Mar 1947
View
the Central England Temperature pages
| The coldest
winter since 1740 |
The winter of 1962/63 was the coldest over England
and Wales since 1740. As in 1947, anticyclones to
the north and east of the British Isles brought bitterly
cold winds from the east day after day. As in 1947,
depressions followed tracks to southward of the British
Isles and their fronts brought snow to England, Wales
and the southernmost parts of Scotland.
Mean maximum temperatures for January 1963 were more
than 5 °C below average over most of Wales, the Midlands
and southern England and in some places more than
7 °C below average. Mean minimum temperatures over
this area were equally far below average. The story
was much the same in February.
The winter began abruptly, just before Christmas
1962. The weather in the first three weeks of December
was changeable and sometimes stormy. From the 4th
to the 6th, London experienced its worst spell of
fog since the Great Smog of 1952.
Ten days later, the weather was particularly wet
and stormy, with a gust of 88 knots recorded at Blackpool
during the night of 15/16 December, the strongest
since records began in 1946. The weather situation
changed markedly on 22 December. On the 23rd, high
pressure extended all the way from the southern Baltic
to Cornwall, bringing cold easterly winds to much
of England and Wales.
A belt of rain over northern Scotland on 24 December
turned to snow as it moved south, giving Glasgow its
first white Christmas since 1938. The snow belt reached
southern England on Boxing Day and became almost stationary.
The following day, snow lay five centimetres deep
in the Channel Islands and 30 cm deep in much of southern
England.
A blizzard over south-west England and south Wales
on 29 and 30 December brought snowdrifts 6 m deep.
Villages were cut off, some for several days. Roads
and railways were blocked. Telephone wires were brought
down. Stocks of food ran low. Farmers couldn't reach
their livestock. Thousands of sheep, ponies and cattle
starved to death.

Fig 5: The start of the winter: the cold
front that brought the snow to England on 26 December
1962. Chart for 0600 UTC on 26 December. |
From Boxing Day 1962 to early March 1963, much
of England was continuously under snow. Unlike
the winter of 1947, however, 1962/63 was sunnier
than average in most parts of the area affected,
considerably so in some places.
Manchester's sunshine total for January was
more than twice the average. Even in the south
of England, where snow fell frequently, sunshine
totals were above average in most places.
The most remarkable feature of the 1962/63
winter was not so much its snowiness as its
coldness. The winter of 1947 was snowier than
1962/63, but not as cold.
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In January 1963, there were 25 or more air frosts
almost everywhere in southern England and south Wales.
In February 1963, air frost occurred every night at
Durham, and almost every night in the English Midlands.
At several stations in southern England and south
Wales, mean maximum temperatures were below 0 °C in
January and little higher in February. Mean minimum
temperatures were well below freezing almost everywhere
in England, Wales and Scotland away from coasts. Extremely
low temperatures were recorded - for example, a minimum
of -22.2 °C was recorded at Braemar on 18 January.

Fig 6: Maximum and minimum temperatures
Leckford, Hampshire 8 Dec 1962 - 9 Mar 1963
Lakes and rivers froze. Ice formed on harbours in
the south and east of England. Patches of ice formed
on the sea. Huge blocks of ice formed on beaches where
waves broke and the spray froze. Coastal marine life
suffered severely.

Fig 7: Coastal areas were affected by ice
Photo © Lynn Tait Gallery |
As in 1947, so it was in the winter of 1962/63:
brief thaws occurred from time to time, and
winter didn't fully relax its grip before early
March. In the last few days of February and
the first few days of March 1963, sunny weather
brought afternoon temperatures of 4 or 5 °C,
but clear skies allowed temperatures to plummet
at night. Frosts were moderate or severe.
At last, on 4 March, a mild south-westerly
flow of air reached the British Isles. There
was occasional rain that day in most parts of
Britain, and further rain the following day
in the west and north, this time prolonged.
On 6 March, there was no frost anywhere in the
British Isles and the temperature in London
reached 17 °C - the highest since 25 October
1962.
The coldest winter over England and Wales since
1740, and the coldest over Scotland since 1879,
had ended. With the thaw came flooding, but
nothing like the scale of the 1947 floods. Soon
after the winter of 1962/63, life returned to
normal.
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