The English obsession with weather means we have one of the oldest sets of climaterecords in the world. They reveal a very different London than the one we know now. Inthe 21stC, London and particularly the City, possesses a distinct micro-climate created bythe buildings, the heat and gases they produce and the underlying geography. Why is italways windy in Farringdon, and at Bank? Why is it bizarrely still in Paternoster Square? Why is the air quality on Holborn regularly the worst in Britain when it has lessstanding traffic, and certainly less buses than the King's Road? Who knows, but one thingwe do know is that London is much warmer than it was three centuries ago. Hundreds of thousands of centrally heated buildings and offices spill heat into the air, meaning if it doessnow it doesn't settle and it never gets cold enough to really freeze. Three hundred yearsago, the City of London froze regularly between December and March, and the 1690srecorded six winters when the temperature was consistently below 3'C for more than threemonths; definitely the sort of weather when a man like Samuel Pepys would have worntwo shirts, a waistcoat and a jacket.The streets weren't salted, but many were paved so they became treacherous in freezingweather. Horses had sacks tied to their metal-shod feet, and 'slippers' fitted to the wheelsof their vehicles to prevent dangerous sliding. Working men wore hobnailed boots,sometimes with sacking tied over them (with the studs poking through) for a bit of extragrip. Many gentlemen would resort to them in freezing weather, although the sacking wasunlikely. Women did not wear pattens in icy conditions (I have tried on a pair of pattensand attempted to walk around in them, and I am not convinced anyone wore them in thestreet let alone worked in them as they are lethal). Where there streets and passageswere just mud or dirt and on the banks of the Thames, duckboards were put down for people to walk over. It was not uncommon to find vagrants, or unfortunates who hadfrozen during the night, including one man in the Fleet ditch, discovered standing upright,but dead and solid. The price of coal rose, and the poorest Londoner's had to cut woodfrom the common land, if they hadn't already.Before Bazalgette's Embankment the Thames was a wider, slower river with gently slopingmuddy banks, again covered in duckboards, which must have been very slippy in wet andicy conditions. The bridges were shored up with wide wooden 'sparrows' which trappeddebris and slowed the current, making it easier for ice to form. Sets of stone steps jutted