14 March 2026

Why the Thames Frost Fairs ended, 1814

Frost on the Thames, Samuel Collings, 1788-9.
Credit: Sharon Lathan

Using the ice for leisure activities must have had a  happy history for many Londoners. The River Thames has frozen over many times in the last 700 years, and festivals known as the Thames Frost Fairs sprang up on the river. The first recorded time people took to the frozen riv­er for organised activities was 1309, but a frozen river was unpredictable. It only froze c1 year in 10, except for 4 winters during 1649-66.

The Frost Fair of 1683
The History Press

Until removing the medieval London Bridge in 1831, there were 24 winters in which the Thames in London had frozen over. The river froze more often upstream, beyond the reach of the tide, especially over the weirs. The last big freeze of the upper Thames was 1962–3.

The Thames did not totally freeze over in the London area for centuries. Clearly the river was wider and shallower pre-1831 AND it had not yet been embanked. But mostly the river had been impeded by the Old London Bridge structure. When chunks of ice got caught between the 20 arches, it slowed the water flow, making it more likely to freeze over (for up to two months at a time).

The first big Frost Fair was in winter 1607-8. Once the Thames froze, Fair traders grabbed their chance; dozens of shops popped up overnight. Unlicensed gambling, games, drinking and dancing were held at the fairs, along with stalls selling food and drink, skittle alleys and fair-ground rides. Cheap souvenirs were available and printers set up their presses, making cards & popular sheet-music. Vendors sold a very hot alcohol made of wormwood wine and gin: purl. People enjoyed bull-baiting, puppet shows, bowling and ox-roasting. Boys played ice football games.

It was not until Jan that people started setting up camp. Pubs located on both banks of the river made a fortune during Frost Fairs. The most famous was Blanket Fair, held in 1683-4. Diariest John Evelyn wrote that whole streets of booths were set out on the Thames. He crossed the ice to dine with the Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth, and again in his coach, from Lambeth to Horseferry at Millbank. The ice had now become so thick as to bear streets of booths in which they roasted meat, and diverse shops of wares eg fruit, shoes, books, toys. Hackney coaches carried fares from Somerset House and the Temple to Southwark. Fashionable men in dresses promenaded with wigs and swords, & ladies shopped briskly. The drink­ing tents were filled by female companions, dancing reels to the sound of fiddles, while others sat round large fires. Tea, coffee and edibles aplenty!

Londoners might have been rugged citizens back then, but even so, the Frost Fairs sometimes lasted only a few weeks, and only in cold wint­ers. People had to be aware of rapid thawing, and the potential loss of life and property eg in the fair of 1739 a whole band of ice sank and swallowed up tents, businesses and people. In 1789 a ship was anchored to a riverside pub in Rotherhithe, steadily tied until the ship swung in the melting night ice. The rigid cables carried away the beam, levelled the house & killed 5 people asleep.

Most were held between the C17th-early C19th in the Little Ice Age (C16th-19th), when the river most froze over, though still rarely. At that time, British winterw were more severe than now and the river was wider and slower, further impeded by 19 piers of the medieval Old London Bridge which were removed some years later.

Frost Fair on the River Thames London, 
print, 1814
The British Museum

The 1814 Fair, the worst winter in living memory, ended when the ice began to break Feb 5th, after only 4 days, resulting in deaths. Even though one of the highlights in 1814 had been an elephant being led across the ice to show the river was safe!! Nonetheless this was the last ever London Frost Fair! The Fairs stopped because A] the climate grew milder in 1815. And because of two other important events! B] Old London Bridge was demolished in 1831 and replaced with a new bridge with wider arches, allowing the tide to flow more freely; and C] the river was incrementally embanked later. All of this made the river less likely to freeze. When the new London Bridge opened in 1831, it only had 5 arches. So the Thames never froze over in London again, despite it reaching -20C in very cold winters.

As Europe began to emerge from the Little Ice Age, and globally temperatures began to rise, ice became an ever-rarer sight on the Thames. There was nearly a fair during the severe winter of 1881, when it was expected by many that a Frost Fair would again be held on the Thames. But no.

People on the frozen River Thames, Twickenham, 1881 but there was no Fair.
The National Archives,

The river last fully froze in 1963, and although some Londoners skated, it could no longer host a Frost Fair.




22 comments:

gluten Free A_Z Blog said...

This was a truly interesting post.Those Frost Fairs must have really been something until it became tragic. The weather rules everything

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, I guess snow and ice are popular and fun when they are a novelty. Or where it is so abundant (as in Minnesota) that people have all winter to concoct elaborate ice palaces and the like. I feel bad for the people who lost their lives falling through the Thames ice, but all the collapsing booths must have added to the future finds of the mudlarkers.
--Jim

roentare said...

The Thames Frost Fairs on the frozen River Thames were brief but exuberant spectacles where Londoners shopped, feasted, gambled and even led an elephant across the ice until a warming climate and the rebuilding of Old London Bridge after the era of the Little Ice Age ended the remarkable tradition forever.

Andrew said...

Far further north the River Tyne used to regularly freeze. Having seen photos of it, I mentioned it to a local who is in his seventies and he didn't believe me.

River said...

It all sounds like it was fun, until the melting and deaths, but I am still glad I don't live where ice and snow happens.

Margaret D said...

How interesting Hels. Never ever thought of the river being frozen let alone have a fair on it with all those people including businesses....amazing.

Hels said...

gluten Free
I think that without public holidays and with very short weekends, workers had little chance of entertainment. The Frost Fairs were a brilliant idea, even if they didn't come frequently or reliably. People had such a good time and didn't have to sell their children into coal mines to pay to get into the icy river.

Hels said...

Parnassus
Right...people in snowy and icy locations did find different ways of entertaining themselves in for 3+ cold months. Skiing, riding sleds, skating etc...
But for families without money, building snowmen and ice houses seemed more accessible.

Hels said...

roentare
Innocent people did indeed die, but someone always died from falling off a horse or getting concussion while playing football. The risk of death was either never known publicly or it was taken into consideration by the parents and ignored by the children.
I was an over-protective parent, but I certainly would have allowed my sons to play skittles or watch puppet shows on ice.

Hels said...

Andrew,
the northern rivers certain did freeze more often than the south, but I didn't know about them having Frost Festivals. The Tyne and Wear Museum talked with delight about the frozen 1784 and 1814 winters, leading to frost festivals, markets, skating, football matches and horse racing on the ice in Newcastle.

Hels said...

River
me too. I cannot tolerate anything lower than 12c :(
But citizens in hot climates can also pay a price of course eg dehydration, heat exhaustion and eventually skin cancer.

Hels said...

Margaret
Amazing is true! I have never seen snow or ice in Australia either, but I have seen flakes of snow float around in the air in the northern hemisphere. So it is difficult for us to imagine how very, very thick the ice must have been to completely support shops, oxen and elephants. And fullsize printing presses.

Regency History said...

Examine the paintings and drawings in The Frost Fair of 1814, some by famous artists like Thomas Rowlandson.
Eight or ten printing presses were erected, and numerous pieces commemorative of the Great Frost were actually printed on the ice.

My name is Erika. said...

This is a really fascinating post. I never thought about the Thames freezing, but you explained why it did. The amount of frozen lake time in my area has varied substantially over the last several years, and I guess it's always been like that in history for eons. Have a super weekend Hels.

jabblog said...

It was a fascinating period of history, and hard to believe now.

Hels said...

Regency History
I suspect none of the people who commented here had ever heard of the frost fairs because they hadn't seen any references in books, paintings or tourist guides. Yet you showed several credited to The Trustees of the British Museum. Many thanks.

Hels said...

Erika
On the frozen lake in your area, was there ever any thought of occasionally using it for family entertainment?

Hels said...

jabblog
It was indeed a fascinating and innovative source of fun in rather rough old times. But it won't happen again, even if climate change brings freezes again.

In fact it would be hard to believe now because of municipal controls of public spaces, Health Department safety rules, food inspections, public drinking etc.etc.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

I found this interesting and fascinating not something I have ever thought about

hels said...

Jo-Anne
Exactly. I knew all about London's frost festivals, but I hadn't heard of ice, music or light festivals in Scandinavia or the Baltic States.

Liam Ryan said...

Haha. I smiling reading about all the fun and activities they did over the ice. Slightly bemused about the need for gambling. But hey-ho. I wonder what caused the river to freeze in the 1970s? Was it just temperature or a lack of river traffic at the time?
Thanks hels. 🙂

Hels said...

Liam,
the last huge freeze of Upper Thames was late1962–April 1963 with endless days of ice, blizzards and snow so deep it never thawed. People walked, skated and cycled on it, but there were water mains bursting and pipes in homes freezing up. The weather also caused food shortages with seriously rising prices and fuel shortages with power cuts. So it was not a festive winter at all (See Visit Eton).