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River Thames frost fairs

The River Thames frost fairs[1] were held on the tideway of the River Thames in London, England in some winters, starting at least as early as the late 7th century[2] until the early 19th century. Most were held between the early 17th and early 19th centuries during the period known as the Little Ice Age, when the river froze over most frequently. During that time the British winter was more severe than it is now, and the river was wider and slower, further impeded by the 19 piers of the medieval Old London Bridge which were removed in 1831.

Thames Frost Fair, 1683–84, by Thomas Wyke

Even at its peak, in the mid-17th century, the Thames in London froze less often than modern legend sometimes suggests, never exceeding about one year in ten except for four winters between 1649 and 1666. From 1400 until the removal of the medieval London Bridge in 1831, there were 24 winters in which the Thames was recorded to have frozen over at London.[3] The Thames freezes over more often upstream, beyond the reach of the tide, especially above the weirs, of which Teddington Lock is the lowest. The last great freeze of the higher Thames was in 1962–63.[4]

Frost fairs were a rare event even in the coldest parts of the Little Ice Age. Some of the recorded frost fairs were in 695, 1608, 1683–84, 1716, 1739–40, 1789, and 1814. Recreational cold weather winter events were far more common elsewhere in Europe, for example in the Netherlands. These events in other countries as well as the winter festivals and carnivals around the world in present times can also be considered frost fairs. However, very few of them have actually used that title.

During the Great Frost of 1683–84, the most severe frost recorded in England,[5][6][7] the Thames was completely frozen for two months, with the ice reaching a thickness of 11 inches (28 cm) in London. Solid ice was reported extending for miles off the coasts of the southern North Sea (England, France and the Low Countries), causing severe problems for shipping and preventing the use of many harbours.[8]

Historical background edit

One of the earliest accounts of the Thames freezing comes from AD 250, when it was frozen solid for six weeks. In 923, the river was open to wheeled traffic for trade and the transport of goods for 13 weeks. In 1410, it lasted for 14 weeks.[citation needed]

The period from the mid-14th century to the 19th century in Europe is called the Little Ice Age because of the severity of the climate, especially the winters. In England, when the ice was thick enough and lasted long enough, Londoners would take to the river for travel, trade, and entertainment, the latter eventually taking the form of public festivals and fairs.

The Thames was broader and shallower in the Middle Ages – it was yet to be embanked, meaning that it flowed more slowly.[9] Moreover, old London Bridge, which carried a row of shops and houses on each side of its roadway, was supported on many closely spaced piers; these were protected by large timber casings which, over the years, were extended – causing a narrowing of the arches below the bridge, thus concentrating the water into swift-flowing torrents. In winter, large pieces of ice would lodge against these timber casings, gradually blocking the arches and acting like a dam for the river at ebb tide.[10][11]

The frost fairs edit

edit

The first known frost fair on the River Thames was in AD 695, although it was not known by the title of frost fair. The river froze over for six weeks. Vendors set up booths on the frozen river in which they sold goods.[2]

1608 (first frost fair that was called a frost fair) edit

 
An account of the Frost Fair of 1608, the first frost fair that was called a frost fair

The first recorded frost fair for which the term "frost fair" was used was in 1608.[2] There were barbers, pubs, fruitsellers and shoemakers, who lit fires inside of their tents to stay warm.[12][unreliable source?] Activities at the frost fair included football,[12] and according to an article published in The Saturday Magazine in 1835, dancing, nine-pin bowling, and unlicensed gambling.[13][unreliable source?]

1683–84 edit

The most celebrated frost fair occurred in the winter of 1683–84. Activities included horse and coach racing, ice skating, puppet plays and bull-baiting,[14] as well as football, nine-pin bowling, sledding, fox hunting, and throwing at cocks.[15]

John Evelyn's account of the 1683-84 frost fair:

Coaches plied from Westminster to the Temple, and from several other stairs too and fro, as in the streets; sleds, sliding with skeetes, a bull-baiting, horse and coach races, puppet plays and interludes, cooks, tipling and other lewd places, so that it seemed to be a bacchanalian triumph, or carnival on the water.[14]

For sixpence, the printer Croom sold souvenir cards written with the customer's name, the date, and the fact that the card was printed on the Thames; he was making five pounds a day (ten times a labourer's weekly wage). King Charles II bought one. The cold weather was not only a cause for merriment, as Evelyn explained:

The fowls, fish and birds, and all our exotic plants and greens universally perishing. Many parks of deer were destroyed, and all sorts of fuel so dear that there were great contributions to keep the poor alive...London, by reason for the excessive coldness of the air hindering the ascent of the smoke, was so filled with the fuliginous steam of the sea-coal ...that one could hardly breath.[14]

 
The Frost Fair of 1683[16]

An eye-witness account of the 1683–84 frost:[17]

On the 20th of December, 1688 [misprint for 1683], a very violent frost began, which lasted to the 6th of February, in so great extremity, that the pools were frozen 18 inches thick at least, and the Thames was so frozen that a great street from the Temple to Southwark was built with shops, and all manner of things sold. Hackney coaches plied there as in the streets. There were also bull-baiting, and a great many shows and tricks to be seen. This day the frost broke up. In the morning I saw a coach and six horses driven from Whitehall almost to the bridge (London Bridge) yet by three o'clock that day, February the 6th, next to Southwark the ice was gone, so as boats did row to and fro, and the next day all the frost was gone. On Candlemas Day I went to Croydon market, and led my horse over the ice to the Horseferry from Westminster to Lambeth; as I came back I led him from Lambeth upon the middle of the Thames to Whitefriars' stairs, and so led him up by them. And this day an ox was roasted whole, over against Whitehall. King Charles and the Queen ate part of it.

Thames frost fairs were often brief, scarcely commenced before the weather lifted and the people had to retreat from the melting ice. Rapid thaws sometimes caused loss of life and property. In January 1789, melting ice dragged a ship which was anchored to a riverside public house, pulling the building down and causing five people to be crushed to death.

18th century edit

There were frost fairs in 1715–16, 1739–40, and 1789.

Frost fair, 1814 (last frost fair) edit

 
The Frost Fair of 1814, by Luke Clenell.

The frost fair of 1814 began on 1 February, and lasted four days, between Blackfriars Bridge and London Bridge. An elephant was led across the river below Blackfriars.[18] Temperatures had been below freezing every night from 27 December 1813 to 7 February 1814 and numerous Londoners made their way onto the frozen Thames.[19]

Tradesmen of all types set up booths to sell their wares, and pedlars circulated through the crowd.[20] Food and drink was being sold including beef, Brunswick Mum, coffee, gin, gingerbread, hot apples, Old Tom gin, roast mutton, hot chocolate, purl (wormwood ale), and black tea.[15] Activities included dancing[15] and nine-pin bowling.[13]

As the ice broke up starting on 5 February, several people drowned.[21]

Nearly a dozen printing presses were also on the ice, producing commemorative poems.[22] A printer named George Davis published a 124-page book, Frostiana; or A History of the River Thames In a Frozen State: and the Wonderful Effects of Frost, Snow, Ice, and Cold, in England, and in Different Parts of the World Interspersed with Various Amusing Anecdotes. The entire book was typeset and printed in Davis's printing stall which had been set up on the frozen Thames.[23] The book contained an account of the frost, humorous sayings, anecdotes, various weather-related histories and specifics about "skaiting" according to a 1814 review.[24]

This was the last frost fair. The climate was growing milder; old London Bridge was demolished in 1831[25][26][27] and replaced with a new bridge with wider arches, allowing the tide to flow more freely;[28] and the river was embanked in stages during the 19th century, all of which made the river less likely to freeze. There was nearly a frost fair during the severe winter of 1881, with Andrews (1887) saying, "it was expected by many that a Frost Fair would once more be held on the Thames".[2]

Related events edit

16th century edit

The Thames froze over several times in the 16th century: King Henry VIII travelled from central London to Greenwich by sleigh along the river in 1536, Queen Elizabeth I took to the ice frequently during 1564, to "shoot at marks", and small boys played football on the ice.[11]

Walking from Fulham to Putney 1788–1789 edit

Soon after Beilby Porteus, Bishop of London, took residence at Fulham Palace in 1788, he recorded that the year was remarkable "for a very severe frost the latter end of the year, by which the Thames was so completely frozen over, that Mrs. Porteus and myself walked over it from Fulham to Putney".[29] The annual register recorded that, in January 1789, the river was "completely frozen over and people walk to and fro across it with fairground booths erected on it, as well as puppet shows and roundabouts".

Legacy edit

Engraving edit

 
The first panels of the engraving

In the pedestrian tunnel under the southern end of Southwark Bridge, there is an engraving by Southwark sculptor Richard Kindersley, made of five slabs of grey slate, depicting the frost fair.[30]

The frieze contains an inscription that reads (two lines per slab):

Behold the Liquid Thames frozen o’re,
That lately Ships of mighty Burthen bore
The Watermen for want of Rowing Boats
Make use of Booths to get their Pence & Groats
Here you may see beef roasted on the spit
And for your money you may taste a bit
There you may print your name, tho cannot write
Cause num'd with cold: tis done with great delight
And lay it by that ages yet to come
May see what things upon the ice were done

The inscription is based on handbills[31] printed on the Thames during the frost fairs.

In popular culture edit

An early chapter of the novel Orlando: A Biography by Virginia Woolf takes place on the frozen River Thames during the Frost Fair of 1608.

In the historical mystery, The True Confessions of a London Spy by Katherine Cowley key events of the plot occur at the Frost Fair of 1814.

In the book, “One Snowy Night” by Amanda Grange, the characters go to the Frost Fair of 1814.

In the Doctor Who episode "A Good Man Goes to War," River Song encounters Rory Williams as she is returning to her cell in the Stormcage Containment Facility. She tells him that she has just been to 1814 for the last of the Great Frost Fairs. The Doctor had taken her there for ice-skating on the river Thames. "He got Stevie Wonder to sing for me under London Bridge," she says. When Rory expresses surprise that Stevie Wonder sang in 1814, River cautions him that he must never tell the singer that he did.[32]

The Doctor Who episode "Thin Ice" is set during the final frost fair in 1814, and includes a reference to the elephant crossing stunt.[33]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details/collection_image_gallery.aspx?assetId=599805001&objectId=3199037&partId=1 Erra Paters Prophesy or Frost Faire 1684/3
  2. ^ a b c d Lockwood, Mike; Owens, Mat; Hawkins, Ed; Jones, Gareth S.; Usoskin, Ilya (2017). "Frost fairs, sunspots and the Little Ice Age". Astronomy & Geophysics. 58 (2): 2.17–2.23. doi:10.1093/astrogeo/atx057.
  3. ^ Lamb 1977
  4. ^ Windsor history
  5. ^ Appleby, Andrew B. (Spring 1980). "Epidemics and Famine in the Little Ice Age". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 10 (4 History and Climate: Interdisciplinary Explorations): 643–663. doi:10.2307/203063. JSTOR 203063.
  6. ^ Manley, Gordon (2011). "1684: The Coldest Winter in the English Instrumental Record". Weather. 66 (5): 133–136. Bibcode:2011Wthr...66..133M. doi:10.1002/wea.789.
  7. ^ Manley, G. (1974). "Central England temperatures: monthly means 1659 to 1973" (PDF). Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society. 100 (425): 389–405. Bibcode:1974QJRMS.100..389M. doi:10.1002/qj.49710042511.
  8. ^ "No. 1900". The London Gazette. 31 January 1683. p. 1.
  9. ^ The London Mercury Vol.XIX No.113
  10. ^ Manley, Gordon (May 1972). Climate and the British Scene. Collins. p. 290. ISBN 978-0002130448.
  11. ^ a b Schneer 2005, p. 72
  12. ^ a b "The Thames Frost Fairs". Historic UK. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  13. ^ a b "Sports & Games – 1608–1814 Skittles or Nine Pins on Ice at Frost Fairs on the frozen Thames". Western Public Pleasure Gardens – Public Spaces in Early Europe. 17 December 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2019.
  14. ^ a b c Hudson 1998, quoting Evelyn
  15. ^ a b c de Castella, Tom (28 January 2014). "Frost fair: When an elephant walked on the frozen River Thames". BBC News. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  16. ^ William Andrews (1887). Famous Frosts and Frost Fairs in Great Britain: Chronicled from the Earliest to the Present Time. G. Redway. pp. 16–17.
  17. ^ "HARD FROSTS IN ENGLAND". The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. 7 February 1829. Retrieved 14 January 2010 – via the Internet Archive.
  18. ^ "The Curious Story of River Thames Frost Fairs". Thames Leisure. 13 June 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  19. ^ Selli, Fabrizio (27 November 2018). "All the fun of the Frost Fair: why, when and how did Londoners party on the ice?". Museum of London. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  20. ^ Shute, Joe (23 December 2013). "The Big Freeze that became an unforgettable Frost Fair". The Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  21. ^ Milmo, Cahal (31 January 2014). "When winter really was winter: the last of the London Frost Fairs". The Independent. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  22. ^ "The last Thames frost fair". The History Press. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  23. ^ Printed ‘Frost Fair’ ephemera in the University Library
  24. ^ The British Critic, and Quarterly Theological Review, p. 221
  25. ^ Review of "Professional Survey of the Old and New London Bridges" in The Examiner, issue 1232, 11 Sep 1831 (London)
  26. ^ Barge crashes into bridge ruins, in the Morning Chronicle, issue 19547, 20 Apr 1832 (London)
  27. ^ Schneer 2005, p. 70
  28. ^ Schneer 2005, p. 73
  29. ^ Porteus 1806, p. 27
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 June 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  31. ^ The Encyclopedia of Ephemera, by Maurice Rickards, Michael Twyman, Sally De Beaumont, p. 154
  32. ^ Martin, Dan (29 April 2017). "Doctor Who recap: series 36, episode three – Thin Ice". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  33. ^ Hogan, Michael (29 April 2017). "Doctor Who: Thin Ice, series 10 episode 3 review - a touch of nostalgia keeps old-fashioned caper rollicking along". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 May 2017.

Sources edit

  • Britton, John; Brayley, Edward Wedlake; Brewer, James Norris; et al. (1816). The Beauties of England and Wales, Or, Delineations, Topographical, Historical, and Descriptive, of Each County. Vol. X. Thomas Maiden. p. 83.
  • Currie, Ian (1996). Frost, Freezes and Fairs: Chronicles of the Frozen Thames and Harsh Winters in Britain from 1000 A.D. Coulsdon, Surrey: Frosted Earth. ISBN 978-0-9516710-8-5.
  • Davis, George. Frostiana; Or a History of the River Thames in a Frozen State. (London: printed and published on the Ice on the River Thames, 12mo., 5 February 1814)
  • Drower, George. 'When the Thames froze', The Times, 30 December 1989
  • Evelyn, John (1684). "An Abstract of a Letter from the Worshipful John Evelyn Esq; Sent to One of the Secretaries of the R. Society concerning the Dammage [sic] Done to His Gardens by the Preceding Winter". Philosophical Transactions. 14 (155–166): 559–63. doi:10.1098/rstl.1684.0025. JSTOR 102048. S2CID 186213994.
  • Hudson, Roger (1998). London: Portrait of a City. London: The Folio Society. OCLC 40826947.
  • Humphreys, Helen (2007). The Frozen Thames. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-4144-0.
  • Lamb, H.H. (1977). "Appendix to Part III: Table App. V.6 and App. V.7". Climate: Present, past and future. Vol. 2. London: Methuen. pp. 568–570. ISBN 978-0064738811.
  • Porteus, Dr. Beilby (1806). A Brief Description of Three Favourite Country Residences. Cambridge: privately printed in a limited edition.
  • Reed, Nicholas (2002). Frost Fairs on the Frozen Thames. Folkestone: Lilburne Press. ISBN 978-1-901167-09-2.
  • Schneer, Jonathan (2005). The Thames: England's River. London: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-86139-7.

External links edit

  • . Glass. Victoria and Albert Museum. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  • Print of The Frost Fair, 1684: "Great Britains Wonder"

river, thames, frost, fairs, frost, fair, redirects, here, other, frost, fairs, throughout, world, winter, festival, were, held, tideway, river, thames, london, england, some, winters, starting, least, early, late, century, until, early, 19th, century, most, w. Frost fair redirects here For other frost fairs throughout the world see Winter festival The River Thames frost fairs 1 were held on the tideway of the River Thames in London England in some winters starting at least as early as the late 7th century 2 until the early 19th century Most were held between the early 17th and early 19th centuries during the period known as the Little Ice Age when the river froze over most frequently During that time the British winter was more severe than it is now and the river was wider and slower further impeded by the 19 piers of the medieval Old London Bridge which were removed in 1831 Thames Frost Fair 1683 84 by Thomas Wyke Even at its peak in the mid 17th century the Thames in London froze less often than modern legend sometimes suggests never exceeding about one year in ten except for four winters between 1649 and 1666 From 1400 until the removal of the medieval London Bridge in 1831 there were 24 winters in which the Thames was recorded to have frozen over at London 3 The Thames freezes over more often upstream beyond the reach of the tide especially above the weirs of which Teddington Lock is the lowest The last great freeze of the higher Thames was in 1962 63 4 Frost fairs were a rare event even in the coldest parts of the Little Ice Age Some of the recorded frost fairs were in 695 1608 1683 84 1716 1739 40 1789 and 1814 Recreational cold weather winter events were far more common elsewhere in Europe for example in the Netherlands These events in other countries as well as the winter festivals and carnivals around the world in present times can also be considered frost fairs However very few of them have actually used that title During the Great Frost of 1683 84 the most severe frost recorded in England 5 6 7 the Thames was completely frozen for two months with the ice reaching a thickness of 11 inches 28 cm in London Solid ice was reported extending for miles off the coasts of the southern North Sea England France and the Low Countries causing severe problems for shipping and preventing the use of many harbours 8 Contents 1 Historical background 2 The frost fairs 2 1 AD 695 first known frost fair 2 2 1608 first frost fair that was called a frost fair 2 3 1683 84 2 4 18th century 2 5 Frost fair 1814 last frost fair 3 Related events 3 1 16th century 3 2 Walking from Fulham to Putney 1788 1789 4 Legacy 4 1 Engraving 4 2 In popular culture 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Sources 8 External linksHistorical background editOne of the earliest accounts of the Thames freezing comes from AD 250 when it was frozen solid for six weeks In 923 the river was open to wheeled traffic for trade and the transport of goods for 13 weeks In 1410 it lasted for 14 weeks citation needed The period from the mid 14th century to the 19th century in Europe is called the Little Ice Age because of the severity of the climate especially the winters In England when the ice was thick enough and lasted long enough Londoners would take to the river for travel trade and entertainment the latter eventually taking the form of public festivals and fairs The Thames was broader and shallower in the Middle Ages it was yet to be embanked meaning that it flowed more slowly 9 Moreover old London Bridge which carried a row of shops and houses on each side of its roadway was supported on many closely spaced piers these were protected by large timber casings which over the years were extended causing a narrowing of the arches below the bridge thus concentrating the water into swift flowing torrents In winter large pieces of ice would lodge against these timber casings gradually blocking the arches and acting like a dam for the river at ebb tide 10 11 The frost fairs editAD 695 first known frost fair edit The first known frost fair on the River Thames was in AD 695 although it was not known by the title of frost fair The river froze over for six weeks Vendors set up booths on the frozen river in which they sold goods 2 1608 first frost fair that was called a frost fair edit nbsp An account of the Frost Fair of 1608 the first frost fair that was called a frost fair The first recorded frost fair for which the term frost fair was used was in 1608 2 There were barbers pubs fruitsellers and shoemakers who lit fires inside of their tents to stay warm 12 unreliable source Activities at the frost fair included football 12 and according to an article published in The Saturday Magazine in 1835 dancing nine pin bowling and unlicensed gambling 13 unreliable source 1683 84 edit The most celebrated frost fair occurred in the winter of 1683 84 Activities included horse and coach racing ice skating puppet plays and bull baiting 14 as well as football nine pin bowling sledding fox hunting and throwing at cocks 15 John Evelyn s account of the 1683 84 frost fair Coaches plied from Westminster to the Temple and from several other stairs too and fro as in the streets sleds sliding with skeetes a bull baiting horse and coach races puppet plays and interludes cooks tipling and other lewd places so that it seemed to be a bacchanalian triumph or carnival on the water 14 For sixpence the printer Croom sold souvenir cards written with the customer s name the date and the fact that the card was printed on the Thames he was making five pounds a day ten times a labourer s weekly wage King Charles II bought one The cold weather was not only a cause for merriment as Evelyn explained The fowls fish and birds and all our exotic plants and greens universally perishing Many parks of deer were destroyed and all sorts of fuel so dear that there were great contributions to keep the poor alive London by reason for the excessive coldness of the air hindering the ascent of the smoke was so filled with the fuliginous steam of the sea coal that one could hardly breath 14 nbsp The Frost Fair of 1683 16 An eye witness account of the 1683 84 frost 17 On the 20th of December 1688 misprint for 1683 a very violent frost began which lasted to the 6th of February in so great extremity that the pools were frozen 18 inches thick at least and the Thames was so frozen that a great street from the Temple to Southwark was built with shops and all manner of things sold Hackney coaches plied there as in the streets There were also bull baiting and a great many shows and tricks to be seen This day the frost broke up In the morning I saw a coach and six horses driven from Whitehall almost to the bridge London Bridge yet by three o clock that day February the 6th next to Southwark the ice was gone so as boats did row to and fro and the next day all the frost was gone On Candlemas Day I went to Croydon market and led my horse over the ice to the Horseferry from Westminster to Lambeth as I came back I led him from Lambeth upon the middle of the Thames to Whitefriars stairs and so led him up by them And this day an ox was roasted whole over against Whitehall King Charles and the Queen ate part of it Thames frost fairs were often brief scarcely commenced before the weather lifted and the people had to retreat from the melting ice Rapid thaws sometimes caused loss of life and property In January 1789 melting ice dragged a ship which was anchored to a riverside public house pulling the building down and causing five people to be crushed to death 18th century edit There were frost fairs in 1715 16 1739 40 and 1789 Frost fair 1814 last frost fair edit nbsp The Frost Fair of 1814 by Luke Clenell The frost fair of 1814 began on 1 February and lasted four days between Blackfriars Bridge and London Bridge An elephant was led across the river below Blackfriars 18 Temperatures had been below freezing every night from 27 December 1813 to 7 February 1814 and numerous Londoners made their way onto the frozen Thames 19 Tradesmen of all types set up booths to sell their wares and pedlars circulated through the crowd 20 Food and drink was being sold including beef Brunswick Mum coffee gin gingerbread hot apples Old Tom gin roast mutton hot chocolate purl wormwood ale and black tea 15 Activities included dancing 15 and nine pin bowling 13 As the ice broke up starting on 5 February several people drowned 21 Nearly a dozen printing presses were also on the ice producing commemorative poems 22 A printer named George Davis published a 124 page book Frostiana or A History of the River Thames In a Frozen State and the Wonderful Effects of Frost Snow Ice and Cold in England and in Different Parts of the World Interspersed with Various Amusing Anecdotes The entire book was typeset and printed in Davis s printing stall which had been set up on the frozen Thames 23 The book contained an account of the frost humorous sayings anecdotes various weather related histories and specifics about skaiting according to a 1814 review 24 This was the last frost fair The climate was growing milder old London Bridge was demolished in 1831 25 26 27 and replaced with a new bridge with wider arches allowing the tide to flow more freely 28 and the river was embanked in stages during the 19th century all of which made the river less likely to freeze There was nearly a frost fair during the severe winter of 1881 with Andrews 1887 saying it was expected by many that a Frost Fair would once more be held on the Thames 2 Related events edit16th century edit The Thames froze over several times in the 16th century King Henry VIII travelled from central London to Greenwich by sleigh along the river in 1536 Queen Elizabeth I took to the ice frequently during 1564 to shoot at marks and small boys played football on the ice 11 Walking from Fulham to Putney 1788 1789 edit Soon after Beilby Porteus Bishop of London took residence at Fulham Palace in 1788 he recorded that the year was remarkable for a very severe frost the latter end of the year by which the Thames was so completely frozen over that Mrs Porteus and myself walked over it from Fulham to Putney 29 The annual register recorded that in January 1789 the river was completely frozen over and people walk to and fro across it with fairground booths erected on it as well as puppet shows and roundabouts Legacy editEngraving edit nbsp The first panels of the engraving In the pedestrian tunnel under the southern end of Southwark Bridge there is an engraving by Southwark sculptor Richard Kindersley made of five slabs of grey slate depicting the frost fair 30 The frieze contains an inscription that reads two lines per slab Behold the Liquid Thames frozen o re That lately Ships of mighty Burthen bore The Watermen for want of Rowing Boats Make use of Booths to get their Pence amp Groats Here you may see beef roasted on the spit And for your money you may taste a bit There you may print your name tho cannot write Cause num d with cold tis done with great delight And lay it by that ages yet to come May see what things upon the ice were done The inscription is based on handbills 31 printed on the Thames during the frost fairs In popular culture edit An early chapter of the novel Orlando A Biography by Virginia Woolf takes place on the frozen River Thames during the Frost Fair of 1608 In the historical mystery The True Confessions of a London Spy by Katherine Cowley key events of the plot occur at the Frost Fair of 1814 In the book One Snowy Night by Amanda Grange the characters go to the Frost Fair of 1814 In the Doctor Who episode A Good Man Goes to War River Song encounters Rory Williams as she is returning to her cell in the Stormcage Containment Facility She tells him that she has just been to 1814 for the last of the Great Frost Fairs The Doctor had taken her there for ice skating on the river Thames He got Stevie Wonder to sing for me under London Bridge she says When Rory expresses surprise that Stevie Wonder sang in 1814 River cautions him that he must never tell the singer that he did 32 The Doctor Who episode Thin Ice is set during the final frost fair in 1814 and includes a reference to the elephant crossing stunt 33 See also editArctic oscillation Chipperfield s Circus started at the 1684 frost fair and continues to this day in its 7th generation Dalton Minimum Frost fair definition in Wiktionary Frozen Strait Great Frost of 1709 Maunder Minimum Sporer MinimumNotes edit https www britishmuseum org research collection online collection object details collection image gallery aspx assetId 599805001 amp objectId 3199037 amp partId 1 Erra Paters Prophesy or Frost Faire 1684 3 a b c d Lockwood Mike Owens Mat Hawkins Ed Jones Gareth S Usoskin Ilya 2017 Frost fairs sunspots and the Little Ice Age Astronomy amp Geophysics 58 2 2 17 2 23 doi 10 1093 astrogeo atx057 Lamb 1977 Windsor history Appleby Andrew B Spring 1980 Epidemics and Famine in the Little Ice Age Journal of Interdisciplinary History 10 4 History and Climate Interdisciplinary Explorations 643 663 doi 10 2307 203063 JSTOR 203063 Manley Gordon 2011 1684 The Coldest Winter in the English Instrumental Record Weather 66 5 133 136 Bibcode 2011Wthr 66 133M doi 10 1002 wea 789 Manley G 1974 Central England temperatures monthly means 1659 to 1973 PDF Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 100 425 389 405 Bibcode 1974QJRMS 100 389M doi 10 1002 qj 49710042511 No 1900 The London Gazette 31 January 1683 p 1 The London Mercury Vol XIX No 113 Manley Gordon May 1972 Climate and the British Scene Collins p 290 ISBN 978 0002130448 a b Schneer 2005 p 72 a b The Thames Frost Fairs Historic UK Retrieved 21 August 2019 a b Sports amp Games 1608 1814 Skittles or Nine Pins on Ice at Frost Fairs on the frozen Thames Western Public Pleasure Gardens Public Spaces in Early Europe 17 December 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2019 a b c Hudson 1998 quoting Evelyn a b c de Castella Tom 28 January 2014 Frost fair When an elephant walked on the frozen River Thames BBC News Retrieved 9 August 2019 William Andrews 1887 Famous Frosts and Frost Fairs in Great Britain Chronicled from the Earliest to the Present Time G Redway pp 16 17 HARD FROSTS IN ENGLAND The Mirror of Literature Amusement and Instruction 7 February 1829 Retrieved 14 January 2010 via the Internet Archive The Curious Story of River Thames Frost Fairs Thames Leisure 13 June 2016 Retrieved 20 June 2016 Selli Fabrizio 27 November 2018 All the fun of the Frost Fair why when and how did Londoners party on the ice Museum of London Retrieved 9 August 2019 Shute Joe 23 December 2013 The Big Freeze that became an unforgettable Frost Fair The Telegraph Telegraph Media Group Archived from the original on 25 January 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Milmo Cahal 31 January 2014 When winter really was winter the last of the London Frost Fairs The Independent Retrieved 9 August 2019 The last Thames frost fair The History Press Retrieved 9 August 2019 Printed Frost Fair ephemera in the University Library The British Critic and Quarterly Theological Review p 221 Review of Professional Survey of the Old and New London Bridges in The Examiner issue 1232 11 Sep 1831 London Barge crashes into bridge ruins in the Morning Chronicle issue 19547 20 Apr 1832 London Schneer 2005 p 70 Schneer 2005 p 73 Porteus 1806 p 27 City Insights page on Kindersley s frieze Archived from the original on 28 June 2010 Retrieved 13 July 2010 The Encyclopedia of Ephemera by Maurice Rickards Michael Twyman Sally De Beaumont p 154 Martin Dan 29 April 2017 Doctor Who recap series 36 episode three Thin Ice The Guardian Retrieved 12 February 2018 Hogan Michael 29 April 2017 Doctor Who Thin Ice series 10 episode 3 review a touch of nostalgia keeps old fashioned caper rollicking along The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 1 May 2017 Sources editBritton John Brayley Edward Wedlake Brewer James Norris et al 1816 The Beauties of England and Wales Or Delineations Topographical Historical and Descriptive of Each County Vol X Thomas Maiden p 83 Currie Ian 1996 Frost Freezes and Fairs Chronicles of the Frozen Thames and Harsh Winters in Britain from 1000 A D Coulsdon Surrey Frosted Earth ISBN 978 0 9516710 8 5 Davis George Frostiana Or a History of the River Thames in a Frozen State London printed and published on the Ice on the River Thames 12mo 5 February 1814 Drower George When the Thames froze The Times 30 December 1989 Evelyn John 1684 An Abstract of a Letter from the Worshipful John Evelyn Esq Sent to One of the Secretaries of the R Society concerning the Dammage sic Done to His Gardens by the Preceding Winter Philosophical Transactions 14 155 166 559 63 doi 10 1098 rstl 1684 0025 JSTOR 102048 S2CID 186213994 Hudson Roger 1998 London Portrait of a City London The Folio Society OCLC 40826947 Humphreys Helen 2007 The Frozen Thames Toronto McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 0 7710 4144 0 Lamb H H 1977 Appendix to Part III Table App V 6 and App V 7 Climate Present past and future Vol 2 London Methuen pp 568 570 ISBN 978 0064738811 Porteus Dr Beilby 1806 A Brief Description of Three Favourite Country Residences Cambridge privately printed in a limited edition Reed Nicholas 2002 Frost Fairs on the Frozen Thames Folkestone Lilburne Press ISBN 978 1 901167 09 2 Schneer Jonathan 2005 The Thames England s River London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 86139 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frost Fair on the River Thames Frost Fair Mug Glass Victoria and Albert Museum Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2007 Print of The Frost Fair 1684 Great Britains Wonder Historical Weather Events 1650 1699 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title River Thames frost fairs amp oldid 1199654684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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