A Victorian heatwave

Setting the record straight
by Philip Eden

The surge of warmth during the latter part of July provided a timely reminder that we have just passed the anniversary of one spectacularly hot day which held pride of place in many record-books for the best part of a century. You won't find it there now, though.


It happened 136 years ago. On the evening of July 22, 1868, Dr G.H. Fielding of Tonbridge, Kent, read his thermometers and noted a maximum temperature for the day of 100.5F (38.1C). Not until the summer of 2003 was such a reading again emulated in the UK, but Dr Fielding's record was dropped many years before that.


So why has the Tonbridge figure, accepted for so many years, been discarded? The difficulty is that nineteenth century weather recorders, at least until the 1880s, did not have a have an accepted standard for the exposure of their instruments. That is not to cast any aspersions on their observational competence: the majority of them certainly carried out their meteorological duties with great assiduity. The fact is that many thermometers were attached to north-facing walls, while during the second half of the century more and more were hung on specially designed stands and shelters that protected the instruments from the rain and also from direct sunlight, but were otherwise left open to the elements.