What a superb resource! I had no idea that there was a free archive of station data like that, even including ones such as the short-lived Sittingbourne station in the 1960s. Happily, that includes 1963, so at long last I can see what the last legendary winter looked like in my locality. (Sittingbourne is a few miles inland from here, but won't be greatly different - it's usually only a degree or two different to here).
And from a quick look, there were 11 ice days in January 63, 4 more in February and none in March. There was a run of 8 ice days in a row, and a 3-day period with lows in negative double digits, peaking at -13.9.
That means that the Feb 2018 "Beast" (which had a max of -1.2 here on the 2nd March, and a min of -14.8 on the morning of the 28th February) was not only the coldest late Feb/early March of my lifetime, but for decades before... truly remarkable.
The other thing that's of note in 63 was when the cold spell ended - at the end of February Sittingbourne reported a run of days a few degrees above freezing, but still -9 to -7 at night, followed in early March by days of +6 to +8, but still between -7 and -5 at night. It suggests the cold air took some shifting, but even back then the strength of the sun caused significant warming by day.
EDIT: And I can only dream of a summer like the one that followed. The absolute max was just 24.4, and temperatures didn't regularly reach 20 until late July. By mid-August they were below 20 generally. Only three days of the whole summer reached 23C!
Contrast that with last summer, regarded as mediocre on here. Temperatures were reliably above 20 by late June and stayed that way until mid-September. There were 20 days above 25C (let alone 23C). That's an incredible warming - I've certainly noticed it since the 80s, but the 60s look to make the 80s seem positively tropical!
Originally Posted by: Retron