BBC News at 6 Storm 1987

BBC 6 o'clock news on The Great Storm of 15th / 16th October 1987 with Nicholas Witchell & Philip Hayton, covering the worse storm to hit the UK for 300 years.

Пікірлер: 41

  • @philskype101
    @philskype1014 ай бұрын

    the biggest shocker from that is how they just tell you the news.

  • @youwhatmate
    @youwhatmate2 жыл бұрын

    This is one of my earliest memories! I was nearly 3, watching cars rocking from side to side out of the window of our house in Dorset, until Dad told me to stay away from the glass. No power, had my grandparents round so we could all be together (my Nan was rightly convinced the storm was going to be bad), huddled in the living room with oil lamps for light. The noise was insane!

  • @paulfrost8895

    @paulfrost8895

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was 20 and living in Massachussetts ' I think I recall a much earlier event in London from the 70s although nowhere near as severe as this one.

  • @AnthonyD-yy2in
    @AnthonyD-yy2inАй бұрын

    I was 21 years old and living in North London. I watched this storm with my friend and his girlfriend through their front living room window... Never seen anything like it!

  • @mpwheatley
    @mpwheatley4 ай бұрын

    As a 16 year old I slept through it, woke up early for work & couldn't understand why the power was off, went downstairs and the front door was wide open. Only found out about it by finding a battery powered radio! My village in north east Hampshire was cut off for two days. We had absolutely no warning at all.

  • @sanchoodell6789
    @sanchoodell67893 жыл бұрын

    4:41 the biggest shocker was looking at that Fire Engine, Even in 1987 the design of it (and Ambulances from this time) looked rather quaint and old fashioned.Particularly when you looked to continental Europe or the USA They looked like they were designed in the 1960s with their curvaceous lines and round headlights a rather than more angular design which was the fashion in car design up to this time. 7:36 What happened to that Vauxhall 'Flat Flat' (in Lambeth) was quite incredible.

  • @lindathomas5500
    @lindathomas55007 ай бұрын

    I remember this hitting Cornwall, the sound of the wind coming in off the ocean. The windows (I had sash windows) shock so badly I thought they were going to smash.

  • @kirstyburden9262
    @kirstyburden9262 Жыл бұрын

    I remember the great storm well in my childhood days in 1987.

  • @Jeannette-op5qe
    @Jeannette-op5qe7 ай бұрын

    I remember in 1987.

  • @glen1555
    @glen15552 ай бұрын

    I was driving on the M25 at one in the morning and struggling to drive my Volvo, a heavy and solid car. The next morning whilst having breakfast i saw several cars turning around in my drive, when I set off to go to work i found out why. Trees across the lane. I managed to find a route onto the motorway which was eerily empty, apart from a few trucks blown onto their sides, just like in one of those movies set after an apocalypse

  • @BrokenKanuck
    @BrokenKanuckАй бұрын

    How the accent has changed over time is so fascinating.

  • @CybershamanX
    @CybershamanX3 жыл бұрын

    Wow. So few comments here. I found this really interesting. I'm American, and what I remember most from this time was Baby Jessica stuck in the well. So, my apologies to my brothers and sisters from across the pond. What a horrible disaster. Considering that even today there are still deaths in hurricanes even when there is plenty of warning, I'm actually amazed the death toll in this surprise storm wasn't much higher. Thankfully it wasn't.

  • @traffic71

    @traffic71

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hi. I had just turned 16 when this happened. I lived right on the south coast and remember it like it was yesterday. It was pretty hairy for a few hours but my house and family were untouched. I don’t remember the baby Jessica story. Thinking back I assume that’s because we had no power when this news program aired!

  • @paulfrost8895

    @paulfrost8895

    2 жыл бұрын

    It was a freak occurance ' I was actually living just outside Boston Mass at the time ' and I recall the incident with the baby stuck in the oil shaft ' think they made a film of it right after if I recall ' I also recall attempting to ring my folks in London and not being able to get through due to Power lines being down eg ' think they sent me a newspaper clipping of it too ' a couple of years before we had a similar but lesser storm which hit the east coast but was a hurricane.

  • @weeardguy

    @weeardguy

    2 жыл бұрын

    The death-toll was probably low because the storm hit during the night. January 25, 1990 saw a similar situation in The Netherlands. But because that storm reached maximum intensity during the height of the evening peak, 18 people lost their life. Surveys later showed that the public had no idea what 'force 12 winds' exactly meant to life in general and thus many people did not really know what to do. Just like in the UK, the January 25, 1990 also rapidly evolved from a not-so-special depression to a strong, extratopical cyclone, leading to the Dutch Met Office (KNMI) issuing warnings for force 10 winds the night before. But because of its rapid increase in wind-speeds and movement along the coast, the storm came as a surprise to many, even though the KNMI tried to warn the public by strengthening the warnings to force 11 and eventually force 12 winds. Because of their rapid evolution and the path along The Channel these storms take and the surprising element in them as computer-models back then usually did not see these storms coming, they are called Channelrats in the Netherlands. I was not even two years old, but I remember it quite vividly: my grandma was over from Amsterdam and had come by public transport, that had ceased to operate at some stage. She called my grandpa to come pick her up. He said he didn't want to risk his car (while he was keen on doing quite stupid things otherwise) and thus would not come to pick her up. In hindsight, a great decision ofcourse, but he would have been better of keeping the real reason to himself ;)

  • @CybershamanX

    @CybershamanX

    2 жыл бұрын

    @weeardguy Wow, thanks for sharing your story! 😀

  • @CybershamanX

    @CybershamanX

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@traffic71 You, too, buddy! 😀

  • @AJM01
    @AJM01 Жыл бұрын

    I remember cycling to school that morning! It was a bit windy and a bit of rain but I didn't really think much of it.

  • @johnlawrence2757
    @johnlawrence27572 ай бұрын

    And we were all making jokes about Sevenoaks having to be renamed - the area having suffered a particularly bad night

  • @eveningstar3230
    @eveningstar3230 Жыл бұрын

    I was there maldon essex

  • @hondac7028
    @hondac70284 ай бұрын

    I was 16 in 87 remember this well 87 was a bad year for disasters zeebrugh ferry,kings cross fire then this .😮

  • @vanessalouise8988

    @vanessalouise8988

    2 ай бұрын

    I remember the King cross fire. 🔥 Zeebrugge disaster and the storm of 1987.

  • @marnanel
    @marnanel4 ай бұрын

    "the day a storm battered Britain without warning" - except for that mysterious woman who phoned Michael Fish. SHE knew.

  • @shep9231
    @shep92312 жыл бұрын

    The British Met office was relying upon information from ships at sea, backed up with satellites. The reason they lost so much information and the information dried up was because shipping stayed away from the track of the storm. which means their information sources dried up. Thats why they had no warning. There was no shipping to give them that warning. Oh they learned many lessons from these events. We all did. I watched this... thing... this monster ashore... what I saw that night, what I felt that night... still terrifies me even thirty years later.

  • @adamlea6339

    @adamlea6339

    2 жыл бұрын

    In addition, there was strike action at Meteo France which reduced obnservations from the near continent, and one observation of sea level pressure from a ship was incorrect, recording a pressure higher than reality, which meant the storm intensity was underestimated. If they had got the storm intensity correct, they would likely have predicted the change in track to the NE which brought the strongest winds over SE England (intense depressions do have a tendency to swing more northward).

  • @andymerrett

    @andymerrett

    4 ай бұрын

    @@adamlea6339 So the French stick it to us again. Not that it would've made much difference, you can't do a lot to protect property and nature from winds that severe.

  • @rshegg7605
    @rshegg76059 ай бұрын

    I slept like a log , through the whole thing 😮😂

  • @Analogue1
    @Analogue1Ай бұрын

    6:02

  • @soulandfire9252
    @soulandfire92522 жыл бұрын

    At 5.27 I wander if that is actual footage of the storm or stock footage? If it's actual then it's easily the best I've seen from the '87 storm, winds clearly blowing around 60 -70 mph across the sea.

  • @weeardguy

    @weeardguy

    2 жыл бұрын

    It could very well have been real footage, shot in the morning. As the storm moved away onto the North Sea, the wind would not be gone completely yet.

  • @soulandfire9252

    @soulandfire9252

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@weeardguy Yes it looks like it could be. Probably shot from the Norfolk coastline in that case.

  • @chazurbex3011
    @chazurbex301110 ай бұрын

    got how things change! the 'only' person to die in London was A tramp sleeping rough! wow............

  • @soulandfire9252

    @soulandfire9252

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah that really sticks out.

  • @SiVlog1989
    @SiVlog19893 жыл бұрын

    The winds were unquestionably hurricane force, but they were not a hurricane because of the location hurricanes occur, the Western Atlantic, Caribbean and South Eastern USA

  • @traffic71

    @traffic71

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly right. Hurricane strength but not a hurricane.

  • @andymerrett

    @andymerrett

    4 ай бұрын

    I'm sure we were all comforted by that technicality.

  • @stevenmakepeace2013
    @stevenmakepeace20133 ай бұрын

    Back when everyone believed the news

  • @danielstanyard6996
    @danielstanyard69963 жыл бұрын

    6:25 they certainly had an agenda back then didn't they!

  • @marnanel

    @marnanel

    4 ай бұрын

    "nobody worth mentioning really"

  • @neilsmith2009
    @neilsmith20093 ай бұрын

    geo engineering is real

  • @redmercury77
    @redmercury773 ай бұрын

    Wow, also in the news... the Iranians up to no good in the Gulf. Who'd have thought? 😀