1836 Wheat, 48^. 6d. per qr. ; barley, 32^ lod. oats, 

 23^. id. (Official Returns). 



Value of ;ioo tithe rent charge, ^"100 (Official 

 Returns). 



Seven years' average : Wheat, 56*. 2d. ; barley, 315. Sd. ; 

 oats, 22s. (Official Returns). 



Wool, 2o\d. per Ib. ; beef and mutton, $%d. ; cheese, 

 6\d. (Driver). 



Off-going ewes made 23.?. 6d. each (John Phillips). 



Lincoln wool, ijd. Wheat averaged 23 J bushels an 

 acre (John Phillips). 



Began harvest August zoth finished September 5th 

 (Cox). 



Began harvest August nth; finished October i5th 

 (H. Baker). 



Above an average crop (Driver). 



Very violent storm, November 2Qth (Penny Magazine). 



Extraordinary absence of snow from 1832 to 1836 

 (Penny Magazine). 



Medium crop in -England. In Scotland very cold, 

 with rain in July and August. Crop remarkably back- 

 ward ; a portion never ripened (Clarke). 



July and August 0*3 above average temperature. 

 Rain in July and August. Harvest very backward 

 (Times). 



October 29. Snow fell in a frosty state of weather and 

 remained on the ground a week. December 24. Much 

 snow fell at night, which in many places being drifted 

 stopped the roads for several days (Cox). 



Hot in July. A wet autumn, especially October 

 (Brumham). 



December 26. Snowstorm and great drifts in Wiltshire 

 (Waylen). 



A hurricane of almost unexampled violence in this 

 country on November 2pth was followed on Christmas- 

 day by a tremendous storm of snow and wind, which 



