The week long cold spell at the start of February 2012 is far from the the worse experienced even though temperatures went down to minus double figures.
The winter of 1739-40 was a bitter one with gales blowing in from the heart of Russia and lowering temperatures in eastern England down to -9C. It is reputed that the frost was so hard that it split trees in two and many a sailor on the east coast lost fingers due to frostbite. The cold spell lasted from December through to March and the poor folk of Suffolk suffered from such ailments as scurvy because their crops failed in the torrid conditions.
During 1830 such a severe frost occurred at Christmas that it is said streams and mill ponds froze solid in 48 hours.
1850 saw temperatures plunge to -15C together with a heavy fall of snow on Christmas night
On 18th January 1881 hurricane force winds initiated what became known as The Great Blizzard which resulted in 10 foot drifts of snow, loss of life and rail and roads blocked. A temperature of -21.7C was recorded at Bury St Edmunds.
During November 1890, 16 inches of snow fell on Ipswich and the intense cold lasted throughout December.
The winter of 1890-91 saw a frost that lasted most of December and January with the River Yare freezing up between Norwich and Yarmouth. After experiencing temperatures above 20C in May within four days they had dropped to -3C and snow.
In 1895 the River Deben froze allowing skating across it.
1907-08: Norfolk and Suffolk recorded 12 inches of snow on 23rd April,
1947 was particularly cold when it was said you could drive a car on Oulton Broad as snowstorms occurred throughout January and February together with a period of sustained cold where the temperature in East Anglia never rose above -5C. In East Suffolk 300 Prisoners of War assisted the authorities in clearing the snow. By mid February electricity supplies were ordered to be cut. The river Waveney froze over so that it was possible to skate from Beccles to Lowestoft. March brought a thaw which resulted in much flooding.
The winter of 1962-3 became the coldest since 1740 with heavy snowfalls creating 12 foot drifts in coastal Suffolk. This came to be known as The Big Freeze with a sustained period of cold lasting from late December through to early March with storms and blizzards. Homes across the UK suffered power cuts caused by power lines being brought down by ice on the cables and fallen trees.
The only year in recent history that is worth mentioning is that of 1978/1979 when a great blizzard hit the south on New Year's Eve. January's temperature averaged -0.4C, as continuous frosts and snowfalls continued.
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