Nevertheless judging off written accounts, December was very wet in our region, but an extreme suppressed jet pattern locked in an icebox over much of the PNW from January thru March with the Fraser frozen over right out to Richmond. Meanwhile, California got slammed with endless rains and massive floods with the entire central valley turning into a shallow inland sea. Was basically a very, very, very extreme version of winter 2016-17.
Here's an excerpt detailing the frozen Fraser at the time:
Source: https://books.google.ca/books?id=XHZGaS ... &q&f=falseIce appeared on the 1st January, 1862, and the river at New Westminster was unnavigable on the 4th; it was completely frozen over on the 9th, and the ice attained a thickness of 13 inches in the channel opposite the R. E. Camp, on the 12th of February.
Sleighs were running from Langley to several miles below New Westminster, and persons walked from Hope to the latter place, a distance of 80 miles, on the ice, at the end of January.
Lake Harrison and the other lakes were frozen. Navigation from New Westminster was open to the mouth of the river on the 11th of March, and from Yale on the 12th April.