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By MARTIN DELGADO

Half-a-million Christmas travellers had their holiday plans ruined yesterday as heavy snowfalls caused massive disruption nationwide.
Major airports were shut and motorways left at a standstill.
Families heading for the sun queued for hours at check-ins in a desperate bid to re-book flights as Gatwick and Heathrow were closed for much of the day.
British Airways cancelled all its flights from Heathrow yesterday, hours before snow forced the airport to close.

As rival airlines flew out, BA cancelled 50 flights, stranding 2,000 furious passengers.
Amid angry scenes, BA customers demanded to know why the national carrier was unable to continue operating before the weather closed runways.

Officials at Gatwick, which was shut by snow for two days at the beginning of the month, seemed to have learned from that crisis as it reopened at 2.45pm after 47 snow ploughs had cleared runways.
Heathrow remained closed last night, despite a huge operation involving 50 specialist workers and 60 snow-clearing vehicles, each worth £250,000.

The forecast is for more until Christmas and possibly beyond. Tomorrow is due to stay bitterly cold, with snow, sleet or rain in most areas. After a slight let-up on Tuesday and Wednesday, temperatures are set to plunge again, enveloping the country in yet more snow, severe overnight frost and freezing fog.
A quarter of all train services were delayed yesterday. Eurostar trips were taking up to an hour longer.
Only two Premier League football matches survived and race meetings at Ascot, Newcastle, Lingfield and Haydock – and today’s at Carlisle – were postponed.



A train pulls into Hunts Cross Station, Liverpool in the snow. Many train companies are running an amended timetable


Motoring groups said the South was worst-affected, with drivers suffering most problems within the M25 and in the Home Counties. But no part of Britain was spared and North West England was hit by a ten-inch deluge of snow.
Ambulance patient Daniel Martin, 31, died when the vehicle skidded off a road near Eastbourne and crashed into a bush.
An unnamed teenage girl died in Cork, Ireland, when she sledged down a slope at a golf course and crashed into a tree.



Winter scene: A lake in St James's Park, Central London. The last time temperatures dropped this low, the Thames and Cam rivers froze over, with students able to skate on the Cam
More Snow in London England 18. 12. 2010
Groudle Glen Railway at Christmas Time in the Snow 2010(2/2)
Snow on The Settle and Carlisle railway Sat 18th Dec 2010.
London Snow December 18 2010 - Swakeleys to Ruislip
source: dailymail [endtext]
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