These wonderful seasonal photographs really capture the spirit of Brighton and Hove as residents braved thick snow in winters gone by.

Many of our readers will remember long winters when snow would settle for days on end, covering rooftops and roads.

Back in 1935, it got so cold that Falmer Pond would be covered in a layer of ice so thick that people could skate on it.

Cars would regularly get stuck in thick snow at Saddlescombe Hill, near Devil’s Dyke and at what used to be Waterhall golf course people would even get out their skis.

A photo from 1963 shows the Clock Tower decorated with lights, like it is now, though it is also adorned with Christmas trees.

That winter was the coldest for more than 200 years – temperatures plummeted so low that the sea froze in places and 1963 remains one of the coldest winters on record.

It began abruptly just before Christmas in 1962 and brought blizzards, blocks of ice and temperatures lower than -20C in parts of the UK.

In December 1967, a storm left the city covered in a thick layer of snow for days.

The New England Road viaduct, now the railway bridge for the Brighton mainline, was covered in snow.

A bus was abandoned in Falmer Road, Woodingdean.

In the winter of 1986, high snow drifts made Roedean Road impassable and pictures show stranded cars.

And in more recent memory, a storm in February 2012 brought thick snow to Sussex.

Prior to the snowing on February 4 and 5, 2012, winter 2011 to 2012 had been relatively mild.

At The Met Office weather centre in Herstmonceux, a snow depth of 12cm was recorded – some of the thickest snow in recent memory.

Argus archive pictures show Falmer and Woodingdean looking picturesque covered in a white blanket of snow.





Source link

[Featured]

[Just In]

Share.
Leave A Reply

© 2024 The News Times UK. Designed and Owned by The News Times UK.
Exit mobile version