Friday, December 15, 2006







Climate Origins of a White Christmas

Why do we all dream of a White Christmas? The holiday season is invariably viewed as a snowy event, even though most populous places in The United States and Europe have little chance of seeing snow on the ground by the end of December. So what gives?

Blame it on what Climatologists call "The Little Ice Age," a period when the entire globe was much cooler than it is now, causing raw, extended winters across northern parts of Europe and the U.S. The Little Ice Age generally is said to have ended in the mid 1800's after the third minimum of global temperatures occurred [WikiPedia]. It turns out that much of Christmas lore is trapped inside.

The image above shows temperatures during the last 1000 years (redder colors indicate more recent (probably more reliable studies). Global Warming aside, it's clear that we're much warmer now than we were in 1600, or even 1850.The pink area indicates the Little Ice Age and the dark pink band indicates the time during which the most memorable Christmas stories were written. Below I discuss three of the most famous pieces.

A SNOWY CHRISTMAS CAROL IN THE U.K.:

Charles Dickens released "A Christmas Carol" in 1843. The inspiration for the town (reference this web site which no longer exists) was Bayham Street in Camden Town, part of London. He moved there as a child in 1822. His photographic memory (answers.com) probably stored shots of various snowstorms that occurred in December during the Little Ice Age. Although he mentions snow a lot in the book, ironically the original commissioned illustrations by John Leech are all inside shots -- no snow. It's taken 150 years of remakes (48 movies!) and artists creative talents to interpret the book's cold climate for us and burn into our minds those pictures of a snow-covered London street (like this one).

Although he describes the cold Scrooge using winter terms near the beginning of the novel, it's not until "Stave 3: The Second of the Three Spirits" where he goes into detail about the heavy snow on the ground and falling:

So did the room, the fire, the ruddy glow, the hour of night, and they stood in the city streets on Christmas morning, where (for the weather was severe) the people made a rough, but brisk and not unpleasant kind of music, in scraping the snow from the pavement in front of their dwellings, and from the tops of their houses, whence it was mad delight to the boys to see it come plumping down into the road below, and splitting into artificial little snow-storms. By this time it was getting dark, and snowing pretty heavily...

By the way, if you haven't seen the 1999 remake with Patrick Stewart, it's worth a view.

TWAS THE SNOWY NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS IN NEW YORK:

Here's another classic:
The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below...
Sound familiar? The RenewAmerica Website says: Clement Moore wrote The Night Before Christmas (1822) during [a] cold snap. The poem describes new-fallen snow on Christmas Eve, and reindeer, which are arctic creatures, pulling Santa's sled.

Their insinuation that reindeer were more commonplace in populated areas during The Little Ice Age, and that this might have inspired hooking them to Santa's sleigh, is intriguing. (The Internet has a lot of neat websites, but maps of reindeer populations for the last 150 years isn't one of them, so we may never know). The article also points out that "During the Little Ice Age, Christmas revived as a winter festival with both sacred and secular qualities.."
Wikipedia says that Clement Moore published the poem in the Troy, New York (near Albany) [Google Map] Sentinel.
OVER THE RIVER AND SNOW IN BOSTON IN NOVEMBER?

Wikipedia says that "Over the River and Through the Woods" (which is about heavy snow at Thanksgiving in a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts!) was produced by Lydia Maria Child in 1844. (The suburb is Medford, Massachusetts [Google Map]).

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE SONG?

So what about "White Christmas", the popular song in the 1940's? According to Trivia-Library.com, White Christmas was written by Irving Berlin as part of a film called "Holiday Inn" in 1942 (This article by Doctor Weather has detailed information on the writing of it). Bing Crosby both starred in the film and sung the song, turning it into the 2nd most popular Christmas song in America. "Holiday Inn" got a 7.5 on IMDB, which is pretty good if you're familiar with the site's rating system. The movie was later redone as "White Christmas" in 1954 (again with Bing). Two of the movie's characters, who have a song-and-dance act, travel to Vermont to do a Christmas show. Although frequent cold and snowy winters were already a thing of the past by 1942, most seasoned actors and writers of that era would have undoubtedly heard stories about White Christmases from their parents or grandparents, who would have been kids in the late 1800s, when the Little Ice Age was on its way out.

CONCLUSION: DREAM ON

Unfortunately, there's no concrete proof that winters during the mid 1800's were snowier than now (at least in the U.S. where the oldest Philadelphia records date back to only 1872). But from the study above, I think it's clear that we can lay the blame for dreaming of White Christmases squarely on The Little Ice Age. The BBC in the United Kingdom agrees, saying:
"If current research is correct, it looks like dreaming might be as close as we get to seeing snow at Christmas, if at all."

I've only seen three White Christmases, two in North Carolina (1984 and 1989) and one here in Central Pennsylvania. I don't expect to see them in any more frequency in the future, but I can still dream...

Posted by File Boy, Borrowed from Jesse Ferrell at Accuweather.com

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

By the way, I realize this is a long post. If you just don't care to read all of it, that's fine. I liked it and that's all that matters.

-management

12:49 PM  
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1:51 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

>huff puff huff puff huff puff< Ok - I actually read that whole thing. Interesting theory. Personally, I think the dream on theory is probably closer to the truth - I think Christmas is a magical time and in our society that loves stories (particularly of the oral type) snow adds drama, magic and a chill that you just don't get with an opening line like this:

Once upon a time, it was the night before Christmas, it was foggy and sixty degrees with unseasonably warm temperatures. People were still mowing their fucking lawns!

I think snow is an ingredient that people can’t resist like sugar. Just add sugar! You know how in movies and TV most of the chicks are hot? Well, it’s the same with a Christmas story – regardless of who tells it. TV Chick = Hot! Christmas Story = Snow! I don’t think you have to do any archeology of weather annals to figure out the source of the myth. But it was a good read nonetheless. And now, if you’ll just help me put my eyeballs back in . . .

5:12 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Snippet from Rob Guarino's blog on a possible December 30th snowstorm:
GFS DECEMBER 30

It flat out bombs out over Richmond VA at 985mb or 29.08” I don’t see the cold air yet but this deep of a storm can manufacture it and drag it down. The HIGH is north of the Lakes so it is not in place yet. The 850mb 32 degree line is from Dover eastward to Millville to LBI. That means this could be the coldest core LOW of the season and it is making its own cold air. The 540 line runs from just north of Allentown SW to Gettysburg PA. We are all above 540 at this point and with the LOW in Richmond this would probably start as rain with snow in the Poconos. Mtns of VA and WVA get a nice dose of snow as they are west of the system.

Oh my by the afternoon of the 30th it is 50 miles south of Central Long Island and is a whooping 975mb or 28.79”! This is one heck of a storm….maybe Blizzard for some on this run. 540 line is at the tip of Cape Cod so everyone is in the SNOW, and yeah it is HEAVY. Philly gets 8-12” and Long Island could get 15” NYC Metro is 10-15”, and oh the wind will be popping at 40mph.

-2c to –5c at 850mb so its all snow at all levels. The 700mb LOW is over NYC and the 500mb LOW is stacked in the same spot. 850mb LOW is just SE of NYC. The 700mb position is where the heaviest snow could fall so with the LOWS all stacked pretty close the SWEET spot is NYC, PHILLY and Southern CT.

10:42 AM  

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