What was hot before 1976?
A trip down British weather’s memory lane
A trip down British weather’s memory lane
From Thomas Webb
As clouds and the odd shower break the spell of the recent
heat wave, it’s a good time to reflect on our fascination with hot and sunny
weather in the UK. A lot of comparisons have been made between this year’s heat
and 1976, when Abba were in the charts, flares were in fashion and Britain had
its hottest summer for 350 years.
Alongside the winters of 1947 and 1962-3, the summer of 1976
is part of Britain’s cultural weather memory, when temperatures reached 32°C or
higher for 15 consecutive days and triggered one of the most severe droughts
for the past 150 years. The highest recorded June temperature in the UK was set
on the 28th that year, when Southampton sweated in 35.6°C – a record which
still stands.
The summer of 1976 has become part of a national narrative
and a source of shared positive nostalgia, which has been used as a benchmark
for comprehending extended periods of hot weather ever since. The retelling of
this national weather story in popular culture is important. It shapes
individual memories of the event and influences how individuals construct a
personal understanding of their local climate (whether they have a personal
memory of this event or not) during exceptional weather.
But what came before 1976? What heatwaves – now largely long
forgotten – did people use as a benchmark for comparing hot weather conditions?
‘Day hot’ for Victorian farmers
These questions can be investigated through the use of the
online and freely accessible TEMPEST database, the product of extensive
archival research by scholars from the Universities of Liverpool, Nottingham,
Glasgow, and Aberystwyth. TEMPEST contains more than 18,000 records relating to
extreme weather events in Britain spanning the past 500 years. Its collection
of diary entries, letters, parish registers and newspaper reports provides
valuable insights into how people experienced and responded to unusual and
extreme weather.
Searching for heatwaves on TEMPEST reveals that extended
periods of hot weather weren’t frequent, but were not necessarily uncommon
either. People often made comparisons to previous heatwaves in order to
contextualise the hot weather conditions around them.
These comparisons were measured in a number of ways, ranging
from contrasting record temperatures to anecdotes rooted in memories,
interests, locations and occupations. Some of the comparisons were made in
relation to agriculture and farming practices – for instance, during the dry
and hot summer of 1826, William Herbert from Great Bowden, Leicestershire wrote
in his diary:
21st Aug – The
drought is so great that Mr Clarke’s beast were obliged to be brought yesterday
from Greenholm to Gunsbrook to be watered, that Brook being dry for nearly a
mile together, day hot.
22nd Aug – heard
old Joseph Charlton say last night that he remembered the dry summer of 1762,
he & his mother took 2 cows to Harboro’ Fair and were bid only 20s for the
two, his father took a sow & pigs for which we not bid anything … day hot.
For this Leicestershire farming community, the hot and dry
spell of 1826 was benchmarked against similar conditions in 1762. Their
severity was remembered in personal terms through the impact the weather had on
watering and selling livestock.
Britain’s deadly heat waves
The 1826 drought followed the similarly, and often
overlooked, hot summer of 1825. According to Orion’s British Almanac, one of
several 19th-century collections of extraordinary weather events and
predictions, ten men and 16 horses died under the heat during a hot stretch in
July.
In a letter from John Thomas Swanick in Derby to G. Symons
of London, Swanick observed that temperatures in July 1825 were as high as “the
three hot days which occurred on the 12th, 13th and 14th days of July 1808 when
so many persons died by the effects of it and taking cold liquids.” The death
toll from a heat wave in 1825 could be linked to a deadly hot weather event 17
years earlier, as a means of categorising the severity of weather over time.
Later in the 19th century and into the early 20th century,
it becomes apparent that historical “benchmark” heatwaves replaced one another.
This was especially the case when historical heatwaves went out of living
memory.
In the Baptisms Register for Thorpe Malsor,
Northamptonshire, the summer of 1868 was recorded as a “very dry summer – great
drought and scarcity of water in many places round … Old people in this village
report that 1818 & 1826 were similar years”.
Likewise, a journalist in 1911 reported, in regards to
consistent days reaching 80 degrees Fahrenheit:
So far, in 1911
there have been 35 such days as against 40 in the historic summer of 1868, the
only one in the lifetime of people now living which can compare with the
present season.
The summer of 1976 has not passed out of living memory, but
in 50 years time it may be summer 2018 that we will be looking back on as our
benchmark. As these historical examples suggest, these comparisons will not
just be made in regards to temperature records, but will also be measured by
other connected events that shape personal and collective weather memories of
2018 – such as the 30°C heat in the UK that accompanied England’s victory over
Sweden in the World Cup quarter-finals.
Climate change means that we are likely to see more extreme
weather of all kinds. As the signature of climate change manifests in our
weather, its growing cultural and political importance will frame the ways in
which we look back on the heatwave of 2018 and the weather events that follow.
In the effort to contextualise the weather extremes of the
future, our best resources are the stories that make up our shared weather
memory of the past.
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