List of natural disasters in the British Isles

This is a list of natural disasters in Great Britain and Ireland.

List of natural disasters to have affected the British Isles, ordered chronologically

Colour scheme used in this table:
Geological event
Cold weather event
Hot weather event
High winds event
Wet weather event
Famine
Sickness epidemic
Year Disaster event Notes; disaster type, people killed, region affected, etc.
70,000-75,000 ybpProlonged volcanic winterLong lasting volcanic winters following the Toba catastrophe have been hypothesized to have killed every human not living in Africa at the time.
6100 BCTsunamiCaused by the Storegga Slide, struck east Scotland with 70-foot (21 m) wave after undersea landslip off Norway.
535-536Extreme weather events of 535–536The most severe cooling in the Northern Hemisphere in the last 2,000 years, likely caused crop failures and freezing for the Anglo-Saxons.
10th centuryRegular heatwavesExtended droughts with regularity: also through the period summers lasted half a year and were often warm or very warm - some notably extreme summers.[1]
1091London tornado of 10912 deaths, the early London Bridge, 600 houses, many churches (inc. St Mary-le-Bow)
1235FamineEngland; 20,000 die in London alone[2]
1252-1253Both dry years and excessive heatConsidered by some (e.g. Brooks), as the driest pair of consecutive years known in the record. The summer (and possibly the spring in London/south) of 1252 was outstandingly dry/hot, with the ensuing drought ruining crops and many people died from the excessive heat. Spring/summer 1253 was also noted as dry/hot London/south.[3]
1315-17Great Famine of 1315–17Throughout Europe
1287St. Lucia's floodNot known by that name the flood killed hundreds in England. This flood along with the South England flood of February 1287 contributed to the decline of Dunwich as a major port
132410 years of hot summersDrought in summer (London/south). Possibly the start of ten or so years of warm, often dry summers.[4]
1348-50sBlack Death in EnglandKilled somewhere around 50% of the population
1360sBlack Death in EnglandKilled a further 20% of the population
1485–1551Sweating sicknessSporadic outbreaks kill many thousands
1540-1541Great heat and droughtDry, in 1538-1539. In 1540-1541, the River Thames was so low that seawater extended above London Bridge. Reports at the time suggest that there were many deaths due to the 'Ague', and 1540 is described in contemporary chronicles as the 'Big Sun Year'.[5]
15801580 Dover Straits earthquakeEstimated to have been 5.3–5.9 ML. Two deaths in England.
1607Bristol Channel floods, 160730 January 1607 (possible tsunami). Flooding in the Bristol Channel hit Carmarthenshire, Glamorgan, Monmouthshire, Devon, and Somerset
1623-24FamineSaid to be the last peace-time famine in England
1638The Great ThunderstormWidecombe-in-the-Moor, Devon, four killed and sixty injured
1651-53FamineFamine throughout much of Ireland during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland[6]
1665Great Plague of LondonBubonic plague killed an estimated 100,000 people, 20% of London's population
1665Derby plague of 1665The bubonic plague spread north, but was stalled by the famous quarantine of Eyam
1665-1666Long drought followed by a hot summerEvery month from November 1665 to September 1666 was dry. The climatological summer (June, July and August) of 1666 was amongst the top 10 or so of warm summers in the Central English Temperatures (CET) series (began 1659). CET also suggests that July 1666 had a mean value of 18 °C (64 °F), and August was 17 °C (63 °F). The heat and long drought added to a heightened risk of fire in populated areas. Lack of rain and hot temperatures helped spark the Great Fire of London.[7] As a result, this year saw an end to the Great Plague of London due to extreme heat and fire.
1690sFamineKnown as the seven ill years it occurred throughout Scotland, killing 15% of the population
1703Great Storm of 1703Up to 15,000 deaths, ships lost, mass damage to buildings and trees
16th-18th centuriesLittle Ice AgeLong-lasting period of lower-than-normal average temperatures
1709Great Frost of 1709Extremely cold winter, temperatures as low as −12 °C (10 °F) on 5 January
1729TornadoBexhill-on-Sea struck by a waterspout that came ashore
1740Irish Famine (1740–41)Somewhere between 310,000 and 480,000 people starve in Ireland due to cold weather affecting harvests
1755TsunamiFollowing the Lisbon earthquake, Cornwall was struck by a 10 ft (3.0 m) wave
1770Flooding and stormsIn August throughout southern England. A flood was thought to have occurred in Lynmouth, Devon in 1769 and the date may have transposed to 1796.[8]
1783"Laki haze"Sulphurous gas from an eruption in Iceland suffocates more than 10,000 in Britain,[9] followed by about 8,000 deaths in winter
1816Year Without a SummerCaused by the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora, crops devastated, unknown thousands die
1816-19Typhus epidemicIreland
1831-50Cholera pandemicPart of the 1829–51 cholera pandemic, beginning in London, 55,000 die in outbreaks across England and Wales
1836Lewes avalancheLewes, the only major avalanche recorded in England[10][11][12][13]
1839Night of the Big WindA European windstorm swept across Ireland causing hundreds of deaths and severe damage to property. Gusts were over 100 knots (190 km/h; 120 mph)
1840sGreat Irish FaminePotato blight devastates food sources. British government policies then introduced brought about starvation and disease and this killed somewhere around a million people. The Potato Blight at the time made the situation far worse.
1840sHighland Potato FamineAnother starvation event, similar to the one directly above but in Scoltand and with very few deaths. However, 200,000 were said to have emigrated.
1848Moray Firth fishing disaster100 fishermen and 124 boats lost at sea during a storm in Scotland
1852Holmfirth FloodBilberry Reservoir embankment collapses, causing 81 deaths and a large amount of damage to property.
1859Royal Charter StormNamed for the Royal Charter the storm, which lasted for two days, sank 133 ships killing 800.
1864Great Sheffield FloodDale Dike Reservoir bursts, destroying 800 houses and killing 270 people. (not strictly a natural disaster because it was structural failure caused by human error)
1871Great Gale of 1871Occurring in the North Sea on Friday 10 February 1871 it killed at least 50 people.
1879Tay Bridge disasterA European windstorm on 28 December 1879 caused the Tay Rail Bridge to collapse killing between 60 and 75 people.
1881Eyemouth disaster189 fishermen died during a storm in Scotland
1881Blizzard of January 1881Around 100 die in one of the most severe blizzards ever to hit the southern parts of the United Kingdom
18841884 Colchester earthquakeSeveral people killed, and 1200 buildings destroyed in Essex
1894-1895Winter of 1894–95 in the United KingdomConditions were such that many people died of hypothermia or respiratory conditions
19111911 United Kingdom heat waveHeat wave lasted from early July to mid-September. Newspapers ran deaths by heat columns
1918-191918 flu pandemicWorldwide influenza pandemic nicknamed the Spanish flu
19281928 Thames floodA disastrous flood of the River Thames in London. 14 drowned and thousands made homeless.
19311931 Dogger Bank earthquakeAt 6.1 on the Richter Scale, was the largest earthquake in British history, but caused only minor damage as was offshore.
1946-47Winter of 19461947Right after WWII, blizzards block roads and cause blackouts, resulting in industrial stagnation. Followed by heavy flooding in March, causing £250–375 million of damage.
1952Lynmouth flood of 195234 people were killed, with a further 420 made homeless. Over 100 buildings were destroyed.[14][15][16][17]
1953North Sea flood of 1953307 were killed in the United Kingdom, in the counties of Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.
19551955 United Kingdom heat waveHeat wave and drought throughout the country.
1962-63Winter of 1962–1963Coldest winter for hundreds of years, temperatures as low as −16 °C (3 °F).
1968Great Flood of 1968Flooding causes extensive damage to Southern England.[18]
19681968 HurricaneHurricane-force winds cause 20 deaths in the Central Belt of Scotland. In Glasgow alone, over 300 houses were destroyed and 70,000 homes were damaged. Electrical power also failed in Glasgow, leaving the whole city in darkness. In total the storm felled 8,000 hectares of forest across Scotland (1.6 million cubic metres of timber). The storm, which affected Northern England, Scotland and N. Ireland received little attention from the BBC or the national press.[19]
1976Gale of January 1976The gale of 2–5 January resulted in severe wind damage across western and central Europe and coastal flooding around the southern North Sea coasts. At the time, this was the most severe storm over the British Isles.
1974-1976Two-year drought and UK heat wave1974-1975 had the mildest winter in England and Wales since 1869. However, during the first few days of June 1975, in and around London snow and sleet occurred. During the next week maximum temperatures of 27 °C (81 °F) were recorded each day across the country.[20] The summer of 1976 experienced 5 days of temperatures exceeding 35 °C (95 °F) somewhere in the UK. Between 23 June to 7 July, temperatures in London and other parts of Southern England reached above 32 °C (90 °F) for 15 consecutive days. The weather was settled and temperatures were above average, with many short and long periods of above 30 °C (86 °F) heat, between mid June to mid September. In 1976, the country suffered forest fires, grass fires and water shortages. Summer 1976 was followed by an extremely unsettled Autumn.
19781978 North Sea storm surgeA storm surge which occurred over 11–12 January caused extensive coastal flooding and considerable damage on the east coast of England between the Humber and Kent. Locally severe flooding occurred in Lincolnshire, The Wash, north Norfolk and Kent. Improvements in flood protection following the devastating flood of 1953 meant that the catastrophic losses seen during that storm were not repeated. The storm caused severe damage to many piers along the east coast of England.
1987Great Storm of 1987After Michael Fish famously forecast "very windy" weather mainly over France, an unusually strong storm occurred in October 1987, with wind speeds widely over 100 mph (160 km/h) along England's southern coastline, and which killed 18 people in England. The great storm caused substantial damage over much of Southern England, downing an estimated 15 million trees (including six of the seven eponymous oaks in Sevenoaks).
1990Burns' Day stormWinds of up to 100 mph (160 km/h) kill 97 people and cause £3.37 billion worth of damage, the most costly weather event for insurers in British history.
1990-1991Winter of 1990–91Lasting from December 1990 to February 1991 throughout the United Kingdom, Ireland and Western Europe. About 42 people died, almost all in the UK and Ireland
19981998 Easter floodsAt the start of Easter 1998 (9–10 April) a stationary band of heavy rain affected the Midlands. This resulted in floods in which five people died and thousands had to be evacuated from their homes. The wettest area, with over 75 mm (3.0 in), stretched from Worcestershire towards The Wash and the flooded towns included Evesham, Leamington Spa, Stratford-upon-Avon, Bedford, Northampton and Huntingdon. On Maundy Thursday (9 April), thundery rain in the south of England moved northwards and became slow-moving from East Anglia through the Midlands to north Wales. This band gave some very heavy downpours with hail and thunder. On Good Friday (10th) the band rotated slowly anticlockwise spreading to Lincolnshire and the West Country and continued to rotate, with sleet and heavy bursts of rain in places. There was sleet and snow across the Pennines and north Wales during the evening.[21]
2000FloodingSevere flooding in many parts of the UK. Among the worst hit were York, Kent, Sussex, Shrewsbury, Lewes, Uckfield and Maidstone.[22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]
20022002 Glasgow floods200 people immediately evacuated, but the water supply of 140 thousand people was affected.
20032003 European heat waveMore than 2,000 people may have died in the UK alone as a result of the hottest summer recorded in Europe since 1540. Temperatures remained above 30 °C (86 °F) for 10 days, between 3 and 13 August. The highest temperature known and accepted was recorded at Faversham, Kent on 10 August when it reached 38.5 °C (101.3 °F).
2004Boscastle flood of 2004Boscastle and Crackington Haven, two villages in Cornwall, were heavily damaged due to flash floods.
2005FloodingCarlisle, 8 January 2005[31][32] See Cyclone Gudrun[33]
2005Birmingham Tornado30 injuries caused by the tornado, which uprooted trees, destroyed roofs and picked up cars, causing £40 million in damages.
2006London TornadoOnly one injury, but £10 million of damage caused.
2007Storm KyrillHurricane-force winds across British Isles, at least 11 people dead
20072007 United Kingdom floodsKilled 13 people. Gloucestershire suffers many road and rail closures, power cuts and evacuations, with 420,000 inhabitants left without drinking water requiring emergency assistance from the army. Other areas heavily affected include Yorkshire, Hull and Worcestershire. The disaster is estimated to have caused £6 billion of damage.
20082008 Irish flash floodsFlash floods throughout August lead to one death and the destruction of 50 houses.
20082008 Morpeth floodsRiver Wansbeck bursts its banks causing damage to 995 properties costing £40 million. Flooding across the Midlands and North East England associated with a slow moving front of the low pressure system Mattea.[34]
20092009 Buachaille Etive Mòr avalancheAn avalanche on Buachaille Etive Mòr in Glen Coe in the Scottish Highlands, UK, on 24 January 2009 killed three climbers and injured another.
20092009 Great Britain and Ireland floodsStrong winds and heavy rain across the United Kingdom with the worst flooding concentrated in Cumbria. Four people were killed as a direct result of the flooding.[35]
2009February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfallThere was 55 cm (22 in) of snow causing several deaths and an estimated £1.3 billion in damages
2009-2010Winter of 2009–10Reported to be the coldest weather since 1987. About 22 people died.
2010-2011Winter of 2010-11The winter of 2010–2011 was a weather event that brought heavy snowfalls, record low temperatures, travel chaos and school disruption to the islands of Britain and Ireland. It included the UK's coldest December since Met Office records began in 1910, with a mean temperature of −1 °C (30 °F), breaking the previous record of 0.1 °C (32.2 °F) in December 1981.
20122012 Great Britain and Ireland floodsA series of low pressure systems steered by the jet stream bring the wettest April in 100 years, and flooding across Britain and Ireland. Continuing through May and leading to the wettest beginning to June in 150 years, with flooding and extreme events occurring periodically throughout Britain and parts of Western Europe. On 9 June, severe flooding began around Aberystwyth, West Wales with people evacuated from two holiday parks. 150 people saved by lifeboats with 4–5 ft (1.2–1.5 m) of water. On 28 June, a large low-pressure area moved across Northern Ireland. Its fronts brought heavy rain and large hail to many areas in England. One man died from the storm.
2013St. Jude stormTorrential rain and winds of up to 100 mph (160 km/h) hit the south of England and Wales. 600,000 homes were left without power, and 5 people were killed. In Europe another 6 people were killed by the same storm.
20132013 United Kingdom and Ireland heat waveAn extra 760 deaths were reported in the UK. In Ireland the heat wave indirectly caused 30 deaths by drowning.
20132013 East Coast Tidal SurgeOn 5 December 2013 a large depression that passed eastwards over Scotland brought strong northerly winds along the eastern coast of Britain. This coincided with the spring tide and caused a large tidal surge to affect large swathes of the east coast. Many settlements along the coast were severely flooded, with sea defences breached in many locations.
2013-2014Winter Storms of 2013-14During the winter of 2013–14 the British Isles were in the path of several winter storms, which culminated in serious coastal damage and widespread persistent flooding. The storms brought the greatest January rainfall in Southern England since at least the year records began in 1910. The season saw persistent flooding on the Somerset Levels with recurrent fluvial flooding in Southern England of the non-tidal Thames, Severn and in Kent, Sussex and Hampshire and the Stour in Dorset. Briefer coastal flooding and wave battering damage took place in exposed parts of Dorset, Devon and Cornwall.
20152015–16 Great Britain and Ireland floodsFlooding in Cumbria, Yorkshire, southern Scotland and parts of Ireland.
2017Hurricane OpheliaDuring the autumn of 2017, Ireland and the United Kingdom were hit by Hurricane Ophelia, which had completed its transition into an extratropical cyclone shortly before its landfall in Ireland and subjected the island to hurricane-force winds. Three people were killed by fallen trees in Ireland and 22,000 people were left without electricity. This also cut off internet for some households across the UK.#

See also

References

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