Essential Reading

'I have been a family historian for more than 40 years, and a professional historian for over 30, but as I read it, I was constantly encountering new ways of looking at my family history....Essential reading I would say!' Alan Crosby, WDYTYA Magazine

Thursday 24 August 2023

Using Newspapers in Your Family History Research

 [This article first appeared in Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine, 2022]

Focus on Newspapers

by Ruth A Symes



                                      
The Northern Star, 2nd December 1837. Via Wikimedia Commons.

You may be only a few keyboard strokes away from finding out much more about the events, incidents and background of your ancestor’s life. That’s because one of the easiest ways of enriching your knowledge about your family in the past is by looking at relevant newspaper accounts. And, today, there are several online sources which allow you to access some of these papers quickly, cheaply (and sometimes even for free) from the comfort of your own living room.

 References in newspapers to individual ancestors might include announcements of births, marriages or deaths as well as longer obituaries – these might give more factual information about your ancestors’ key dates than the certificates you already have. More excitingly, he or she might have been hailed as local hero for some reason or another, fined for some misdemeanour, imprisoned for a crime, or injured in an accident. A relative’s business or place of work might be named in adverts or legal notices; his or her words as a witness at an event might be recorded. Depending on time and place, all of these kinds of stories regularly turned up in the press in the past.  

And even if you don’t find the name of an individual ancestor, newspapers can provide a whole host of detail about the community in which he or she was living. No other resource allows you so clearly to experience the life of your family in the past. At the very least, remember that a local newspaper would probably have been your ancestor’s only window on the wider world in eras before the advent of radio, television and other news media.

 

History of Newspapers in Britain

 

Newspapers – in the sense of regular periodic printed accounts of important happenings -  started in Britain in the seventeenth century but don’t expect to see information about your relatives in these very early pages ! At first, papers provided news only from the court and then from London more generally, so you won’t find anything relating to an ‘ordinary’ provincial ancestor within them.  

 As time went on, however, more and more newspapers were produced, first in London, then in other major cities and in smaller towns. The price of newspapers was high – at roughly 7 pence, they were beyond the means of the average man - since proprietors were subject to various government taxes. Nevertheless, the new papers were starting to give voice to a lively variety of different political, religious and geographical viewpoints. It was not until all newspaper taxes were dropped in 1855 that the sheer number of titles available and the average circulation of newspapers increased massively.

 The advent of universal state education in 1870 led to far greater numbers of working-class newspaper readers after this date and the likelihood of you finding an ‘ordinary’ ancestor within a newspaper increases exponentially as we approach the mid-twentieth century. With the increase in the availability of news came an expansion in its content so that sport and entertainment now featured alongside (and sometimes even dominated) accounts of political and social events.  Improvements in rail communication, printing and in the quality of journalism itself further boosted newspaper numbers and readership figures.

 There is much to be said for simply browsing newspapers online and seeing what turns up, but if you are intent on finding out something fairly specific about the lives of your ancestors, take a little time first to jot down what you already know about him or her (in terms of locality, time period and cultural background) in order to start your search in the right place.

 *Ask yourself about which town or county your ancestor would have been living in – and be aware of changing geographical boundaries: Liverpool, for example, would have appeared in Lancashire papers. It’s worth checking with a library or historical institution local to where your ancestor came from to see which newspapers may have serviced that area. Some newspaper titles had longevity, others lasted only a few years, or even a few months.

 Consider the time period in which your ancestor lived. If he fought in World War One, you might want to give special attention to newspapers from that era (see particularly the newspapers available at www.ancestry.co.uk).

 Ask yourself whether your ancestor was a member of a particular ethnic, cultural, religious, social or political group? A Catholic ancestor, for example, might have read or appeared in The Tablet, a Jewish ancestor in the Jewish Chronicle, or a relative with Communist leanings, the Daily Worker. *

 

The British Newspaper Archive and Find My Past

 A good place to start your research is at the British Newspaper Archive online https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/. This site is the result of a partnership between the British Library and FindMyPast  (www.findmypast.co.uk/). The same content is, therefore, available by subscription to the FindmyPast website.

 In both cases, whilst searching is free, actually viewing a relevant newspaper page involves a fee. You can pay a monthly subscription, or a year’s subscription (currently between £12-£14 a month on BNA or FindmyPast Pro Subscription). There is also a Pay-AS-YOU-GO  option on both sites, should you only wish to view a very small number of pages. The resource includes over 45 million pages of local and regional papers across England, Scotland and Wales from 1699 to 2009. A recent addition to the collection is the archive of the Scotland’s oldest national newspaper, The Scotsman, from 1817-1950.

 A million pages have been made available for free, with the promise of another million free pages to be added every year for the next four years.  These papers range in date from 1720-1880. The latter date (now more than 140 years ago) is considered a safe date before which all material is out of copyright.

 Each page has been completely digitised and you can search by a keyword such as your ancestor's name, the address at which he lived, the company for which he worked or an association or interest group with which he was associated. You can download relevant pages to your computer, print them out for safekeeping and even send them to other interested family members by email or other messaging system.

 Don’t assume that every page of every newspaper ever published is already available online. The collection is growing all the time – indeed it is increasing at the rate of half a million pages per month -  so if the paper you want has not yet appeared, keep checking the sites from time to time to see if it has been added.

 

The Genealogist (www.genealogist.co.uk) 

 This is a good place to start if your ancestor experienced the First World War. Accessible to its Diamond Subscribers (for a fee of roughly £400 per annum), online newspapers here include (but are not limited to) : The Illustrated War News (1914-1918), The Great War (1914-1919), War Illustrated (1914-1919). Also available on this site are editions of the Illustrated London News (1842-1919) and the Jewish Chronicle from (1905-1908).

 Ancestry (www.ancestry.co.uk)

 Ancestry has significant holding of papers from Scotland and Northern Ireland. These include: The Dunfermline Journal (1851-1931); The Belfast Newsletter (1738-1925) and a selection of Edinburgh papers (the Advertiser, Courant, Evening Courant, Chronicle, Evening Chronicle and Weekly Journal) from various dates in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Ancestry also holds copies of The Times (1788-1833); and ad hoc papers from Liverpool and Staffordshire.

 

 *Other Online Newspaper Archives

 There are a few online newspaper archives that house only a selected number of titles or even one title. Before taking out a subscription to any of these, check to see if your local library provides them for free (access might be in the library itself or at home online via a library membership number). Libraries in UK Institutions of Further and Higher Education might also allow access to certain newspaper databases and can sometime be accessed for free for non-members with a daily or weekly Reader Card.

 The UK Press Archive (www.ukpressonline)  includes: The Daily Mirror (1803-1980); Daily Express (1903- current); Church Times (1863-current); The Watchman (1835-1884); The Daily Worker (1930-1945); and The South Eastern Gazette (1852-1912). This can be accessed via a private annual or 6 month subscription, or free through a subscribing public library.

 The Times Digital Archive (https://www.gale.com/intl/c/the-times-digital-archive) provides the content of the world’s longest standing continuously running newspaper from 1785-2019. Access is only through subscribing institutions.

 The Welsh Newspaper Archive, (www.newspapers.library.wales/)  includes over 15 million newspaper articles in Welsh and English speaking papers. Free to search and view.

 The Jewish Chronicle Archive (www.thejc.com/archive) provides online access to the world’s oldest Jewish newspaper from 1841. This is free to search. Viewers must be subscribers of the paper or pay £2.50 per viewing session.

 The Tablet (www://archive.thetablet.co.uk)/ The entire text of the Catholic newspaper, The Tablet, from 1840 to the present day. Access is by subscription.

 The Guardian (1821-2003) and Observer (1791-1923) Digital Archive (www.theguardian.newspapers.com)  Papers date back to 1791 including around 13 million articles. Free to search/pay to view.

The National Library of Scotland (www.nls.uk/collections/newspapers/online) This digital collection includes items ranging from the earliest newspaper printed in Scotland, to modern online titles. It also includes hundreds of broadsides, the forerunners of tabloid newspapers. Free to search/pay to view.

  Manx National Heritage (www.imuseum.im) 27 Manx newspaper titles from 1792-1960 have recently been made free to search and view.

    If you can’t find a newspaper from the locality you are looking for, it’s worth doing a general Google search. A few miscellaneous papers have been digitised by volunteers and are often available to view freely.  One of these is the independent local newspaper The Teesdale Mercury (1855-2005) (www.teesdalemercuryarchive.org.uk) which provides the information for free but encourages donations.  

Whilst searching newspapers is one of the easiest ways of enriching your family history research, there are some potential pitfalls.  

 

Fake News ?

 Always treat a newspaper article with a degree of scepticism. It’s easy to get over-excited if you spot your ancestor’s name in a page of newspaper text but be careful not to jump to conclusions. Even if the name seems a particularly uncommon one to you, there may have been many people in a local area with the same name.   

 Be aware that newspaper copy might be superficial or full of errors. It might have been written as a method of propaganda, or might have been subject to censorship, for example, not all bombing raids during the Second World War were reported in the press for fear of lowering public morale.

 Think carefully about the kind of the paper that you are looking at. Was it local, regional, or national? Is it likely to have had a particular religious or political bias? You might need to look at a number of reports of the same event or incident in different papers in order to piece together a more accurate picture of what actually happened.

 

Caught on a Technicality ?

 Newspapers online have been scanned from microfilms of original papers and made into pdfs or similar. They have been indexed using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology. Since this is only 98-99% accurate, mistakes will occasionally be found. The BNA/FindmyPpst encourages reporting of these mistakes. Additionally, zooming in on articles can require patience whilst a new ‘tile’ loads.

At the moment there is no facility at the BNA/Findmypast to print out individual articles from a newspaper, but whole pages can be printed, and the site gives advice on how you can clip out the article you wish for yourself. You can send articles to friends and post them to social media providing you cite the BNA/FindmyPast and include the copyright reference number given for each page on the site.

 Annotated Document 

 Manchester Evening News, 27th December 1927

 Annotations

 1.     Special Occasions

 Look out for anniversaries (eg. Silver and Golden Weddings). These were celebrated more publicly from the 1920s onwards. This page also includes the local ‘Rolls of Honour, Births, Marriages and Deaths and In Memoriam Notices.’

 2.     Photographs

 You may be surprised to come across previously unseen photographs of your ancestors in early twentieth-century papers.  

 3.     Hard facts [The Golden Wedding Anniversary notice of Mr and Mrs Shawcross ]

Gives the date and address of the church in which the couple married, their home address, her occupation, his occupation, his employer’s name, length of service, and date of retirement.

4.     ‘Soft’ (opinion) details [The Shawcross notice and separately The Hardcastle notice. Tells us the opinion that Mrs Shawcross was a ‘well-known’ midwife.

Tells us the opinion that the Hardcastle couple were in ‘good health.’

5.     Adjacent articles [Shawcross notice and Hardcastle notice] The Shawcross and Hardcastle husbands worked in the same occupation and business (as dyers for Messrs Worrall Ltd of Ordsall Lane) and the two couples married at approximately the same time. Perhaps they were relations or friends as well as work colleagues?

6.     Flavour of a locality and an era

This page describes various features of life in Manchester over the Christmas Bank Holiday of 1927 including leisure activities such as pantomimes, charabanc tours, golf, rambling and cycling, football and horse-racing results. The page also covers profit-sharing paid to the employees of Hartley’s Jam Factory in Aintree, Liverpool, local accidental deaths and some news from abroad (an attack on a postal van in Paris).


BIOGRAPHY: John Gilbert: Newspaper Wood Engraver (1817-1897)

 Before the technology was invented to include photographs in newspapers, newspaper editors relied on drawings produced from wood engravings. One of the most prolific newspaper artists was John Gilbert, born in Blackheath, Surrey in 1817. Gilbert’s first job as an estate agent did not suit him at all. He spent every spare minute drawing and painting in watercolours and oils, chiefly copying prints from books. His skills were such that by 1836, he was exhibiting at the Society of British Artists and two years later at the Royal Academy.

 Gilbert’s later talent for wood engraving resulted in commissions from Punch, but he produced far more illustrations for the press after newsagent and printer Herbert Ingram commissioned woodcut images on the subject of a royal masquerade ball to be held on Thursday May 12th 1842. Working from written descriptions of the historical costumes that the guests were expected to wear, Gilbert speedily drew the illustrations directly onto woodblocks. The first edition of the Illustrated London News was launched that very weekend with Gilbert’s pictures ensuring an avid and interested readership. A long career as a news illustrator with that paper and with the London Journal followed.

Outside the world of newspapers, Gilbert produced illustrations for published editions of all the English poets including almost 750 images for an edition of Shakespeare.  First President of St Martin’s School of Art (founded in 1854), President of the Royal Watercolour Society (1871), and knighted in 1872, unmarried Gilbert died in 1897.

 

Resources

1.    Local Newspapers 1750-1920: A Select Location List: England and Wales, Channel Islands, Isle of Man (Guides for Genealogists, Family and Local Historians) compiled by Jeremy Gibson, Brett Langston and Brenda W Smith. The Family History Partnership, 2011. Describes precisely by county and local area what newspapers were published and when.

2.    Historical Research Using British Newspapers by Denise Bates, Pen and Sword 2016. Looks at how newspapers can provide forgotten details and new insights into historical events and examines the pros and cons of using newspapers as a resource.

    3. Read All About It!: A History of the British Newspaper, by Kevin  Williams, Routledge, 2009. Looks at the way newspapers have changed in form, style, content and relationship to government since their inception in the seventeenth century.

4. The Science Museum Digital Library https://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/digital-library.

Registered readers of the Science Museum have free access to the British Newspaper Archive (on site at the Museum) in addition to other online resources.

 5.    Boston Spa Library (https://www.bl.uk/visit/reading-rooms/boston-spa). The British Library, Boston Spa, Wetherby LS23 7BQ. This is the physical home of the UK national newspaper collection. A Reader Pass is required to enter – see website for details. Actual newspapers can be read here, and there is free access to the British Newspaper Archive online.

 

Step By Step  

Step One

Access the British Newspaper Archive Online at  www.findmypast.co.uk or at https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/. Type the name of your ancestor into the search box. On the BNA site, you should surround the name with inverted commas  (these limit the results to those where both words appear together) eg. “Charles Terrell”. You will probably see a large number of results – in this case 17.


Step Two

Reduce the number of results by checking/ticking one or more of the filter options displayed on the right-hand side of the page, eg time period, article type, region, place, name of newspaper, access type (whether free to view or not). The number of results will drop to a more manageable level – in this case, using the time period filter  1900-1949 – in this case 11.

 

Step Three

Read through the brief details of each result. Identify those that look most promising. Click to view (if you are already a subscriber to the site), or click to access Pay-As-You-Go.


Did You Know ?

Print runs of the Times and the Telegraph quickly reached more than 100,000 in the second half of the nineteenth century.


Author Byline

Ruth A Symes is a freelance writer and historian. Her books include Tracing Your Ancestors Through Letters and Personal Writings (Pen and Sword, 2016)

Keywords: Newspapers, news, nineteenth century, twentieth century, eighteenth century, Britain, British, John Gilbert, engravings, England, English, births, marriages, deaths, UK, wedding anniversaries, press, British Newspaper Archive, ancestors, ancestry, forebears, media, regional, local, family history research, genealogy, searchmyancestry, who do you think you are, long lost family


'An Eye on the Weather': How Our Ancestors Monitored Their Climate

 [This article first appeared in Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine in 2022]

‘An Eye on the Weather’: How Our Ancestors Monitored Their Climate

By Ruth A Symes



                 Study of Rooftops in the Snow (Camden), William Lionel Wyllie, 1860s/70s. 


On Thursday 15th July 1762, alongside the usual records of births, marriages and deaths, a rector in Norfolk noted in his parish register that ‘there happened a most violent storm of thunder, lightning, hail and rain, the violence of which resulted in the roof of Billockby parish church falling in, broking [sic] down the seats and causing great damaged to the pulpit and desk.’  

This kind of meteorological detail  – though not required by the authorities - was pretty commonly entered in registers by interested members of the clergy. And, whilst not constituting a comprehensive record of weather in the past, they do show how central concerns about the weather were to the communities in which our ancestors lived. Vicars tended to record events that particularly affected their immediate locality and the church itself, so there are, for example, many accounts of churchyards being so hard and frozen that graves couldn’t be dug. Such parochial accounts of the weather have not, unfortunately, made it to the commercial online genealogical but if you are able to read parish registers in a County Record Office, you might potentially find mentions of shipwrecks, poor harvests, and food shortages – all of which were the result of weather events.

Our ancestors were as interested in the weather as we are – indeed, in the absence of central heating, air conditioning and motorized vehicles, they no doubt paid more attention to it than we do. Average temperatures and rainfall determined everything from the kinds of homes in which they lived, the work they did, the food they ate, the transportation they used and the clothing they favoured. Climate will also have played a part in many of the life events and life decisions that turn up in family history records determining dates of marriage, informing the statistics on causes of death and seasonal mortality rates, and  even shaping decisions to emigrate, migrate or stay put in one geographical region. 

You might want to find out what the weather was like on the day your ancestors were married, or ascertain whether the bronchitis from which they died was brought on by a particularly cold spell. You might be interested in what motivated them to move to a different county or country,  or want to know more about the weather conditions as they emigrated or were transported.

 

So how can you find out more ?| Happily, the resources for historic weather are   multiple.

Newspapers

Historic newspapers can now be searched (many of them freely) via the British Newspaper archive (www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk). Newspapers often gave a brief description of the weather over the past 24 hours with a prediction for the next day. At special times, a detailed account of weather conditions over a period of time might be given as is the case in The Carlisle Journal 23rd November 1811 where a table of pressure, windspeeds and temperatures taken over the previous three weeks at Dumfries was included in the paper around the time of the appearance of a comet.  Other newspaper accounts present the human angle:  on August 12th 1896, for example, The Northern Daily Telegraph commented beneath the subtitle ‘Heat-wave in London’ that, “There was a remarkable accession of heat in London yesterday. Coming after several days with a marked low temperature, the heat was felt with exceptional severity. No fewer than 86 degrees (F) were registered in the shade, and during the afternoon, numerous cases of sunstroke were treated at the various Metropolitan hospitals and other institutions.’

Almanacs and Diaries

In the Victorian period, printed almanacs were purchased and pored over by all social classes. These quirky little books occupied an odd place between superstition and science. From at least the seventeenth century, it was widely believed that the weather for a whole year could be predicted from the movement of the tide, the moon and the planets. The kind of almanacs that might turn up today in antiquarian bookshops and archives included calendars, meteorological information, astronomical positions and prophecy alongside space for diary entries.

Our nineteenth and early twentieth -century century ancestors were kept entertained by the increasing variety and affordability of  apparatus for calibrating the weather including temperature gauges, barometers and rain gauges. Some enthusiasts, such as became so adept at recording weather features that  their diaries actually became the starting point for some aspects of modern meteorological enquiry. Francis Beaufort’s (1774-1857) observations, for example became the basis for the Beaufort’ Scale (a measure for describing wind intensity based on observed sea conditions). 

Additionally, ordinary people frequently made ad hoc mention of the weather in diaries and letters. The published diary of the Rev. Kilvert of Herefordshire records that in chapel on Sunday 13th February 1870,  for example, his ‘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!

An ancestor’s diary might turn up in family papers. Alternatively, a trip to a local record office searched through the Discovery Section of the National Archives website www.nationalarchives.gov.uk  may yield material written by people who lived in the same locality as your ancestor at the same time.  A writer’s diary entries on the weather might reveal something of his or her religious beliefs (was a thunderbolt considered a message from an angry God, for example? or was it purely seen in scientific terms?). If a diarist tends to focus on only the gloomiest or the sunniest aspects of the weather, you might also start to speculate on his or her temperament!  

Official Records

A growing interest in science during the Victorian period (boosted by the foundation of the Meteorological Office in 1854) means that a whole host of more scientific weather records began to be kept by emergent weather stations, and observatories on land and at sea from the mid nineteenth-century onwards. This means that all the major UK weather events, from the harsh winters of 1947 and 1963 to the drought of 1976 and the Great Storm of 1987, have left their imprint in numbers (temperature, pressure and rainfall figures) as well as memories and ad hoc written accounts. More information about six of the key weather stations (Eskmuirdale, Rothamsted, Balmoral, Armagh, Morpeth (Cockle Park) and Llyysdinam) can be read at www.metofficed.gov.uk/weather/learn-abpout/how-forecasts-are-made/observations/recording-observations-for-over-100-years.

Until the 1960s, however, all of this information was written on paper and left unanalysed in archives, Today, scientists have realised the importance of historical-weather facts and figures. Once scanned and transcribed, records can be analysed to enable the dynamic recreation of 4D global weather patterns going back 150 years or more and hence help to predict future weather patterns and potentially indicate climate change. They may also provide new information and understanding for family historians.

You can freely search historical weather data from the current 37 weather stations around the British Isles at the Meteorological Office website https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/climate/maps-and-data/historic-station-data

ACRE Projects

Several potentially interesting weather-related ‘citizen-science’ projects are currently being undertaken under the umbrella of ACRE (Atmospheric Circulation Reconstruction over the Earth) led by Dr Rob Allan of the UK Meteorological Office (see boxout). Volunteers have offered their services in transcribing historical weather data and more are always welcome. A few of the projects to whet your appetite are as follows:

 

Tempest Project  ( www.nottingham.ac.uk/geography/extreme-weather/search) This freely available digital database on extreme weather events uses information that has been extracted from archival records including letters, diaries, church records, school logbooks, newspaper cuttings and photographs. Entries span 500 years of weather history and relate to places across the UK (and Ireland), but focussed on five case-study regions: Central England, Southwest England, East Anglia, Wales, and Northwest Scotland. In addition to information on extreme weather events, you will find details of the original documents, their authors and the collections and repositories in which they are held.

Ships’ Logs  (www.oldweather.org )Arctic, World War 2, whaling and worldwide weather observations made in ships’ logs since the nineteenth century have been transcribed and are freely available to search.


Rainfall Rescue (www.zenodo.org/record/5770389) has made available millions of monthly rainfall amounts, taken at thousands of sites across the UK and Ireland between 1677 and 1960. On the 66,000 scanned sheets of paper are the rainfall measurements, as well as the observer’s name and location, which helps link the measurements to individual people. Census information has been used to identify precise houses or sites where the observations were taken.

Weather Rescue at Sea (www.WeatherRescue.org) looks at data from ship weather logbooks during the 1860s. Previous Weather Rescue projects recovered hourly observations taken on the summit of Ben Nevis and in the town of Fort William between 1883 and 1904, and also observations from the UK, Ireland and mainland Europe recorded in the Met Office's Daily Weather Report from 1861-1874. In the early 1860s, Vice Admiral Robert Fitzroy (former Captain of HMS Beagle) sent weather measurement instruments to various UK locations so that the weather could be continuously monitored for the purpose of providing storm warnings to sailors. The daily observations were sent by telegraph back to London each morning where they were collated and then used by Fitzroy to make the very first storm warnings. By August 1861 these had become general weather ‘forecasts’ – a word invented by Fitzroy himself. Volunteers have transcribed the pressure, temperature and rainfall observations contained in the original scanned documents. The data from these projects are gradually becoming available at (https://catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/uuid/f4dbd99ad3634e64bb45ed6af216086a).

The Female Convicts Research Centre in Tasmania has transcribed weather records relating to 160 ships transporting 13,500 female convicts to Tasmania between 1803 and 1853  (https://www.femaleconvicts.org.au/index.php/database/database-research). To access these records you need to register as a guest researcher at the Female Convicts’ Research Centre via the link above.

The Log of Logs (https://zenodo.org/record/6901#.XElxWZzgrQ0details weather conditions on ships travelling into Australian and New Zealand waters between 1788 and 1990.  This freely searchable source has been of particular interest to family historians searching for the ships on which their ancestors sailed to Australia and New Zealand. 

 

In the future, family historians might look forward to the results of two other ACRE projects being made available for research. One of these is a database of Royal Navy Medical Officers’ Journals, Convict Ships’ Surgeons Journals and Surgeon Superintendents’ Journals  all of which  recorded weather conditions (through observation and weather instruments) alongside health matters on (convict) ships. Weather and the Country House is a (currently stalled) joint project between ACRE and Oxford University which  aims to uncover archival weather/climate and related material, especially historical instrumental weather observations that could be scanned and digitised, from member properties of the Historic Houses Association.

 

For a summary of all the historical weather projects run by ACRE and to offer your own volunteer transcription services visit. www.citsci (met-acre.net)

Boxout : Dr Rob Allan and the ACRE project

Dr Rob Allan is the  International ACRE Project Manager based  at the Meteorological Office in Exeter.  He has also worked on his own family history over many years. Following his development of the International Atmospheric Circulation Reconstructions over the Earth (ACRE) Initiative in 2007, he became interested in how his professional life and his interest in genealogy might be brought together. The result is the genesis of a series of fascinating historical weather projects (detailed in the main text)

ACRE is a ‘grassroots’ initiative, which marshals together the international weather and climate data rescue and science communities for common benefit. It  involves a variety of international historical weather data rescue activities (recovering, imaging/scanning, and digitising historical global instrumental terrestrial and marine weather observations for as far back in time as possible). These data are then fed into dynamical weather reconstructions producing sub-daily weather maps at various heights throughout the depth of the atmosphere extending back into the nineteenth century. The aim is to make these weather reconstructions – which have a quality one sees in modern TV weather presentations  - freely available to all.

Dr Allan’s particular passion has been for the Log of Logs project launched in 2013 at https://zenodo.org/record/6901#.XElxWZzgrQ0.

You can find out more about the ACRE project online at www.met-acre.org. ACRE also has a social media presence on Facebook and Twitter. 

 

Timeline

1.    1st February 1444. St Paul’s Cathedral is struck by lightning in a terrible storm; the steeple is set on fire.

 

2.    Winter 1607-8. Very low temperatures lead to the Thames freezing over; so thick is the ice that a ‘Frost Fair’ is held upon it.  

 

3.    26th November 1703. A Great Storm in Central and Southern England causes devastation  - for the first time, news bulletins about casualties and deaths are sold all over England.

 

4.    Winter 1708-1709. The Great Frost, as it was known in England, or Le Grand Hiver ("The Great Winter"), as it was known in France, is billed as the coldest European winter for 500 years. 

 

5.    14th/15th September, 1786: A major storm destroys houses, overturns coaches and wagons, tears up trees and kills many people, with the Midlands worst hit by winds of up to 80 knots.  

 

6.    1815-1817 A ‘climate crisis’ brought on by the eruption of the volcano Tambora in Indonesia causes the destruction of crops and consequent food shortages across Europe and North America.

 

7.    6th January 1839. The so-called Big Wind  - a European windstorm – sweeps across Ireland and Western England wreaking havoc with great loss of life.

 

8.    June 1858. A heatwave in London exacerbates the decomposition of rubbish in streets and river leading to the ‘The Great Stink’ and outbreaks

 

 

9.    31st January 1953.  Wind, high tide and low pressure causes the North sea to flood land up to 5.6 metres above mean sea level on Britain’s East Coast.

 

10.  23rd June – 27th August 1976 An unprecedentedly long summer heatwave without rain, especially in the South West, led to drought, food shortages and a hike in food prices.

  

9 Weather Sources for Family Historians

1.           1. Parish Registers, Diaries and Letters

www.discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk  Search County Record Offices for the location of parish registers (dating back as far as 1538 in some cases). These might include notes on the weather from the locality in which you are interested. Record Offices might also hold relevant diaries and letters. Viewed originals by appointment on site.

2.    Newspaper Reports

 

www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk  The British Newspaper Archive -  Daily and weekly newspapers from 1700 to the present day. These can be searched according to date, newspaper title, locality or keyword. Many pages can be viewed for free. They may give a record of recent weather events and there may also be longer articles recording the results of storm damage, heatwaves and the like.

 

 

3.    Almanacs

 

www.reading.ac.uk/web/files/history/Almanacs,_Astrology_and_the_Origins_of_Weather.pdf

 Almanacs, Astrology and the Origins of Weather Reading University History Archive  

 

This research project catalogues almanacs from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries in three departments at the University of Reading: the History Department, the Mr John Lewis Collection at Special Collections and the Ephemera Collection at the Department of Typography.

 

4.    Diaries, Logbooks, Images, Journals

www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/library-and-archive National Meteorological Library and Archives at the Meteorological Archive in Exeter.

This includes a comprehensive collection of data, meteorological texts and journals, access to a collection of images, photos and slides depicting all aspects of meteorology, a collection of private weather diaries dating back to the early eighteenth century, marine weather logbooks, a series of  factsheets and on-site internet access and access to online journals.

 

4. Data from UK Weather Stations

 

https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/climate/maps-and-data/historic-station-data  Select a weather station from around the UK and view historic weather data including temperature and rainfall for years dating back to 1961.

 

 

5.    Ships’ Logs

 

www.oldweather.org (linked to ACRE) is a citizen science project helping to transcribe Arctic, World War 2, whaling and worldwide weather observations made in ships’ logs since the nineteenth century. Volunteer transcribers are welcome to join the projects.

 

 

6.    Hydrographic and Navigational Documents

 

www.gov.uk/guidance/the-ukho-archive

 

The UK Hydrographic Office (UKHO) (f.1795). Contains hundreds of thousands of hydrographic and navigational documents, such as Royal Navy Remarks books. Many of these include detailed meteorological observations, from the seventeenth century onwards. Highlights are surveys by Captain Cook and records relating to HMS Beagle and Charles Darwin. Searches can be done in person at the archive in Taunton, remotely or by payment of a research fee in advance to the archive.

 

7.    7. Weather Data Rescue

 

https://www.idare-portal.org  International WMO Data Rescue Project

Umbrella site covering the many projects worldwide to collate historic weather data and explaining how you might get involved,

 

8.    Ships in Australian and New Zealand Waters

 

The Log of Logs   (https://zenodo.org/record/6901#.XElxWZzgrQ0

 

A freely available online source which details weather conditions on ships travelling into Australian and New Zealand waters between 1788 and 1990. 

 

 

9.    Historical Weather Events of Interest

 

www.theweathernetwork.com/weatherhistory  The Weather Network - This Day in Weather History 

 

Miscellaneous articles on international weather events over the past two centuries including Weather in the Trenches during the first World War, typhoons during World War Two and weather over ten Christmases in history.

 

 Weather in numbers  

 

1.    1.  120 = The number of people who died as a result of accidents in the city of Liverpool as a result of the Night of the Big Wind  (6th January 1839).

2.    307 = Number of lives lost in the UK in the North Sea Floods of 1953.  

3.     150.3  Number of knots of the strongest ever gust of wind recorded in the UK (20th March 1986, Cairngorn Summit ).

 

4. 38.5   The highest number of degrees celsius ever recorded in Britain (August 10, 2003, Brogdale, Faversham, Kent)

5. 7,452 million  = The number of cubic metres of water in Loch Ness which is equivalent to the amount of rain that fell across Britain on Saturday 3rd October 2020, the wettest October day on record.

 

Resources sidebar (200 words)

 

·       The Atmosphere Gallery

 

www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/see-and-do/atmosphere

London Science Museum, Exhibition Road, London SW7 2DD.

Through exhibits as diverse as a real Antarctic ice core, tree rings and scientific instruments, the gallery explains ‘how climate works, what it’s doing now and what it might do next.’

·       Climate Talks

www.scienceandindustrymuseum.org.uk/whatson/climate-talks

Online talks, panel discussions,  Q &As and events (organised by the Science Museum Group in 2021) connecting you with leaders, experts, activists and campaigners as they discuss how to tackle the problems of communities in the face of climate change.

·       Royal Meteorological Society

Royal Meteorological Society, 104 Oxford Road, Reading, RG1 7LL

www.rmets.org

Founded in 1850, the Society promotes the importance of the weather and climate to interest groups and individuals of all kinds.

Patrick Nobbs, The Story of the British and Their Weather: From Frost Fairs to Indian Summers, Amberley Publishing, 2016.

The story of the British people and their weather over many centuries looking in particular at extreme weather events such as droughts, tidal waves, storms and volcanoes. 

·       Alistair Dawson, So Fair and Foul a Day: A History of Scotland’s Weather and Climate, Birlinn, 2009.

A detailed account of Scotland’s past weather and climate conditions from the arrival of its first settlers around 9,000 years ago to the present day. Asks how our Scottish ancestors adapted to changes in the climate through the centuries.



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