Six of the Worst: Winters in the UK
WINTER OF 1947
IT was a cold spell which lasted 34 days – from late January to mid March – and brought life to a standstill in Yorkshire and across the country. Villages were cut off, roads, railway lines and canals were impassable and hundreds of animals died from starvation. It was said to be the worst winter since 1880-81, when four feet of snow fell across the country from January 18-21. Temperatures in Leeds fell to 11 Fahrenheit (-11 Celsius). Leeds Corporation had 16 snow ploughs out at night and 36 during the day. Holmfirth undertaker T W Birks even constructed a special sleigh for a funeral.
WINTER OF 1969
Snow and ice gripped the nation in the worst winter since 1962-3. In Leeds, the bad weather forced the cancellation of a Leeds United match but that didn’t mean the players got a day off, trainer Les Cocker led the team on a punishing run through the snow. Pictured above: an Austin Mini gets stuck in the snow on Dewsbury Road. Also this month, the Boeing 747 made its maiden voyage. The historic flight took place on February 9. And Leeds United were at the top of Division One after beating Ipswich 2-0 on the ‘frozen wastes’ of Elland Road, led by Billy Bremner.
WINTER OF 1683 & 1940
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Hide AdIt has to get pretty cold for the River Thames to freeze over to the point where people can not only walk on it but stage an entire fair. But that’s exactly what happened in the Great Frost of 1683–84, which is still the worst frost recorded in England. The fair included gambling, ice-skating and bear-baiting. The deep freeze also affected the rest of the country, with other lakes and rivers also freezing, including the one in River Ribble, at Walton-le-Dale, pictured here in February 1940. The ground also froze solid, meaning farming was impossible.
WINTER OF 1739
The Little Ice Age, which lasted roughly from 1350 to 1850, has a lot to answer for, not least of which is our present-day perception of what Christmas should look like. Christmas cards and the like were first created in the mid-1800s at a time when white Christmases were pretty much a certainty. The winter of 1739-40 was one of the most severe in British history. Temperatures fell on Christmas Day, 1739, leaving the country in a deep freeze until February 17, dropping to -9C at one point. More recently, scientists put the Little Ice Age down to a lull in sunspot activity.
Winter of 1962-3
Britain was in the grip of a bitterly cold winter. It was so cold the Central Electricity Generating Board appealed for all unessential electrical items to be switched off between 8am and 8.30am and 4.45pm and 5.15pm. The appeal came as 8,000 Leeds householders in Leeds were hit by one of the worst winters in living memory. A Generating Board spokesman said: “Although in this bitter winter the load has been abnormally high, the Central Electricity Generating Board has hitherto been able to meet demand. “But... it would help if unessential electrical equipment could be switched off during peak periods.”
WINTER OF 1978
THE famous winter of 1978 was neither as bad as the winter of 1962-3, nor the one of 1947, which was arguably the worst Britain had experienced in the 20th Century.
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Hide AdHowever, it was still bad enough to freeze ponds, lakes and even canals, not to mention bring chaos to the road network and cut entire villages off from civilisation.
People were able to walk across the frozen waterways of Leeds, including canals and lakes.
The Leeds-Liverpool Canal froze near Rodley and people were able to skate on Waterloo Lake, Roundhay.