‘The Thermometer in the Vestibule’ –
Your Ancestors' Weather Diaries
The British weather always provides a talking point and we Brits are more than usually excited at the moment because we are experiencing an unexpected - and very welcome - heatwave. Perhaps you are keeping a record in photographs or on social media of these glorious days ?
Your ancestors were equally interested in the machinations of the weather and how wind, rain and sunshine affected so many aspects of their lives. Before the foundation of the Meteorological Office in 1854 (and
sometimes thereafter when the network of weather stations was still very small),
many people kept detailed daily diaries in which
they recorded not only the general aspect of the weather but also matters such
as the temperature, rainfall and atmospheric pressure. And many people kept a close record of the weather in more ordinary
diaries, letters and other communications too.
Weather Vane,
Skipton Church, North Yorkshire. Weather vanes or ‘anemometers’ which measure
wind speed and direction were first invented in the mid fifteenth century.
Credit: Wikimedia Commons
It’s easy to dismiss references to the weather in our ancestor’s
writings as of little interest. But, the fact that such entries were kept so
copiously reminds us that the weather obviously held even more importance for
our ancestors than it does for us today. With few official sources of
meteorological information, a weather diary could be very useful in predicting
likely conditions from one year to the next. More people in the past worked on
the land and bad weather inevitably meant poor harvests and consequently the
very real fear that less food would be available. A period of aridity or too
much rain might have led to the ruination of crops and consequent rises in
local food prices. Concerns in diaries about extremely cold weather at
Christmastime were very real; vulnerable family members or neighbours might be
considered at real risk at these times since low temperatures inevitably
brought higher rates of mortality.
And, the weather will have circumscribed your ancestor’s life in many
other ways too even if the exact connections are not made explicit in the diary.
Heavy rain or snow, for instance, might have made roads impenetrable on foot or
by horses preventing visits to family or business trips – where today no such
interruption to ordinary life would occur. As Rachel Anne Ketton, of Felbrigg
Hall, Norfolk put it in her diary on Monday 1st February 1869, ‘A
very windy mild morning which turned to rain in the afternoon and prevented
John meeting Mr Motts at Kelling as had been agreed,’ and her diaries go on to
record many other occasions when plans were thwarted or had to be altered
because of the weather.
Rain: How much did the weather shape your ancestor’s daily
life and character?
Credit: Girl’s
Own Paper, Vol VIII, No.
378, March 26, 1887.
|
Scientific Leanings or
Religious Beliefs
For some diarists,
detailing the patterns of the weather was primarily a matter of scientific
endeavour. It was an exercise which gave them a reason to experiment with fledgling
measuring devices such as thermometers (temperature), barometers (air pressure),
hygrometers (air moisture levels) and anemometers (wind speed). Samuel Milford,
an Exeter banker, for example, kept diaries from 1775, and these are believed
to be some of the earliest consistently to record temperature and pressure. Another
early weather diarist was pharmacist Luke Howard (1772-?) who, in 1802, used
his observations of the weather to create a system for naming different cloud
shapes (the basics of which were cirrus,
cumulus and stratus). And a third scientifically-inclined weather diarist was
Sir Francis Beaufort (1774-1857) who created the Beaufort scale (a measure for
describing wind intensity based on observed sea conditions). For women, keeping
a weather diary could be one way of exercising scientific skills in a world in
which they were effectively barred from working as professional scientists.
Whilst many weather diarists saw the world through a scientific lens,
however, others believed the weather to be fundamentally attributable to Divine
powers. In the diaries of these writers, terrible storms were put down to God’s
wrath, and beautiful summer days attributed to His pleasure. An anonymous
diarist in Sheffield in 1843 recorded how a drunk was struck blind by a
thunderbolt in a local hostelry during a particularly bad storm and put this
down to its being a punishment for his
blasphemy (www.sheffielddiary.blogspot.co.uk).
Social history
A weather event might have been considered particularly worthy of note
by an ancestor in a diary if it co-incided with an event of national importance
such as the coronation of a monarch, for example. And weather also contributed to the success
or failure of many local events and activities, such as parades, fetes, harvests,
competitions, and church outings. You can potentially corroborate your
ancestors’ accounts of the weather both in the metropolis and in the locality by
looking at newspapers covering the same area at the same time. Many of these
give a daily forecast as a matter of course. (See the fee-paying site www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk for digitised copies of many national and local papers) The Meteorological Office has also provided
some useful online fact sheets which give detail about the weather on certain
key dates in history such as the day the Titanic set sail and the days of Royal
Weddings, which make useful comparison pieces to personal diaries (http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/learning/library/publications/historical-facts).
A good example of a diary which intertwines comments on the weather with
the social history of a local area is that by William Bulkeley of Anglesey (1691-1760)
Gentleman William Bulkeley lived in Brynddu, Llanfechell on Anglesey, North Wales. There are two extant volumes of his diaries. The first covering the years from 1734-1743, and the second covering 1747-1760. A third missing volume would have bridged the gap between the two. Bulkeley always included comments on the weather alongside his accounts of activity in his neighbourhood such as markets and fairs, football matches and events relevant to his work as a squire of LLanfechell and as a Justice of the Peace. Bulkeley’s diary can now be viewed at the University of Bangor North Wales.
Gentleman William Bulkeley lived in Brynddu, Llanfechell on Anglesey, North Wales. There are two extant volumes of his diaries. The first covering the years from 1734-1743, and the second covering 1747-1760. A third missing volume would have bridged the gap between the two. Bulkeley always included comments on the weather alongside his accounts of activity in his neighbourhood such as markets and fairs, football matches and events relevant to his work as a squire of LLanfechell and as a Justice of the Peace. Bulkeley’s diary can now be viewed at the University of Bangor North Wales.
Gardens and Homes
The study of recurring
plant and animal behaviour in relation to the seasons is known as phenology –
and this pseudo-science is very much to the forefront in some weather diaries. In
the so-called ‘Cobham diaries,’ (1825-1867), Miss Caroline Molesworth, for
example, included special columns of text (labelled ‘Observations Relating to
Animals’ and Observations Relating to Plants’) in which she recorded noteworthy
aspects of life in her garden. On April 20th 1841, for example, she
wrote, ‘Nightingales heard at night’ and ‘Cuckoos heard,’ and in the same
month, she mentions, ‘gnats,’ ‘frogs croaking’ and ‘a gold cover of crocuses’). There are other
entries which show her knowledge of scientific and botanical terms, ‘Tremella Mesenterica’
and ‘Helleboreus Lividus,’ for example, are used rather than the more
colloquial ‘Witches’ Butter’ (a yellow fungus) and ‘Christmas Rose.’ These are
the moments at which the sounds, smells and sights of Moleworth’s world really
come to life. Such diaries have enabled garden historians to see at what time
seasonal crops such as potatoes and strawberries were ready to be harvested in
years gone by, and at what times in particular years in the past certain birds
or animals first made an appearance.
More surprisingly, comments on the weather in diaries often give detail
about the domestic interiors of our ancestors’ worlds – spaces which would
otherwise have been lost to history. As well as mentioning ‘the thermometer in
the vestibule,’ Caroline Molesworth remarks on the growing severity of the weather
in January 1841 by commenting first that the windows are ‘dewed outside’, then ‘dewed
inside,’ then ‘iced,’ and then that ‘the
water is frozen in [the] bedroom and in the dog’s pan in the vestibule’
reminding us of a world without the luxuries of central heating, double
glazing, or piped water in upstairs rooms.
Character and Mental State
Our ancestors’ diaries show how they were constantly called upon to
display great fortitude in their battles against the elements. The Rev.
Kilvert’s diary entry for Sunday 13th February 1870, for example, comments
that the day was so cold that he ‘went
to Bettws in the afternoon wrapped in two waistcoast, two coats, a muffler and a mackintosh, and was not at all
too warm… when I got to the Chapel my beard, moustaches and whiskers were so
stiff with ice that I could barely open my mouth and my beard was frozen on to
my mackintosh.’ Worse still, he had to baptise a baby in a font in which ice
was floating!
If you are particularly lucky, an account of the weather might also have
been used by an ancestor to illuminate an aspect of his or her interior life
and feelings. Grey or wet days, for example, were sometimes lengthily recorded to
emphasise the diarist’s own grief after a bereavement, thunderstorms mentioned
to reflect his or her inner torment or anger at a failed love affair or
thwarted scheme, and sunny weather to accentuate pleasant aspects of life such
as falling in love or having a child. Rachel Anne Ketton is most voluble on the
storms outside when her (surely hypochondriac?) husband is suffering from
terrible toothache or a pain in his leg! Equally weather details might be used
in poignant contrast to the diarist’s own emotions.
In whatever way it mentions rain, snow and sunshine, any family diary
that frequently describes the vagaries of the weather must remind us that, for our
ancestors, such matters were not merely
an incidental backdrop to lives, rather they determined the entire quality of
those lives in ways that we have almost forgotten.
NB: The Milford, Howard, Beaufort, Cobham and Modbury diaries mentioned
above are held at the National Meteorological Archive, Devon
This article first appeared in Discover Your Ancestors Online Magazine
This article first appeared in Discover Your Ancestors Online Magazine
Useful books and websites
Alistair Dawson, So Fair and Foul a
Day: A History of Scotland’s Weather and Climate, Birlinn, 2009.
A. Martin, Scotland’s Weather: An
Anthology, National Museums of Scotland, 1995.
Patrick Nobbs, The Story of the British and Their Weather: From Frost Fairs to Indian
Summers, Amberley Publishing, 2016.
Paul Simons, Since Records Began: The
Highs and Lows of Britain’s Weather, Collins 2008
The Met Office, The MET Office Book of the British Weather, David and Charles,
2010.
https://digital.nmla.metoffice.gov.uk/
Meteorological Office Digital Library and Archive
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wea.469/pdf
Traditional weather observation in the UK
Devon Heritage Centre and National
Meteorological Archive http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/learning/library/about-us
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