December. The record for the warmest News Eve (31st) was set this year, at Great Yarmouth. Recorded then as 60 ºF, this could mean anything between 15.3 and 15.8 ºC.
That was 1901 .................I wonder if they ever thought they would see snow again
February. Very mild (7.1C CET - the mildest of the century before 1990), with westerly winds throughout the month, but stormy, particularly in the north. 14C was recorded at Wick on the 10th, and 16C in London on the 20th. Probably the most spectacular dry dustfall of this century affected much of England and Wales on February 21. There was a severe gale on the 27th, causing widespread damage and deaths across the north of England, with a gust of 92 mph.
November. Mild and generally dry.
December. Mild and dull.
1903
December. A very mild and wet first half. There were four days of continuous rain in parts of the south early in the month: for example, 170 mm of rain fell between the 4th and the 10th in parts of Devon. One and a half inches of rain fell at Nottingham on the 1st. There was a violent westerly gale in southern England on the 16th. The equal record highest maximum for Christmas Eve was set this month, with 15.6C at locations in North Wales.
1910
November. Wet and unsettled. There as a severe gale on the night of the 4-5th, with gusts of 70 mph reported from Blackpool. The gale coincided with a high tide, causing flooding in the Clyde. Many trees were blown over in Scotland. More than 50 mm of rain fell in the Western Highlands, and 93 mm at Seathwaite (Cumbria).
December. Unsettled, wet, and mild.
1911
January. Very warm (7.3C CET), and largely mild and wet - the last wet month for a while. It reached 15.6C (60F) at Llandudno on the 4th and 14.4C (58F) at London on the 9th. There was a severe gale across the night of the 17th and into the 18th.
February. Very mild and exceptionally dry: the driest of the twentieth century in England and Wales. It was also fairly sunny, and with generally light winds there was some fog. 17C recorded in parts of the SE on the 24th.
1921
January. There was a warm January day in London (approximately 16.0C on the 9th at Kensington). It was a very wet month.
February. Mainly mild with S and SW winds. 17C was recorded in Lincoln and Colwyn Bay on the 25th.
1922
My point being the UK has been through cycles of mild periods and cold ones as well .............our time will come again , I could have posted many more examples but the above proves very mild weather hit our shores even back in the good old days
Originally Posted by: Gooner