Daylight Saving Time
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Benjamin Franklin
History and Operation of DST
In 1784
Daylight Saving Time was conceived by Benjamin Franklin during his time as an American delegate in Paris in 1784, in his essay, "An Economical Project." Some of Franklin's French friends had invented a new kind of oil lamp and they continued to correspond with him even after he returned to America. Franklin's essay stated that, given 100,000 Parisian families burn half a pound of candles an hour for an average of seven hours per day (the average time for the summer months between dusk and the supposed bedtime of late-rising Parisians) that:
"183 nights between 20 March and 20 September times 7 hours per night of candle usage equals 1,281 hours for a half year of candle usage. Multiplying by 100,000 families gives 128,100,000 hours by candlelight. Each candle requires half a pound of tallow and wax, thus a total of 64,050,000 pounds. At a price of thirty sols per pounds of tallow and wax (two hundred sols make one livre tournois), the total sum comes to 96,075,000 livre tournois. An immense sum that the city of Paris might save every year." Thus, Daylight Saving Time, likely half in jest, was proposed in order to save candle energy.
In 1883
Time zones were first used by the railroad systems in 1883 to standardize train schedules. According to the The Canadian Encyclopedia Plus by McClelland & Stewart Inc., Canada's "Sir Sandford Fleming played a key role in the development of a worldwide system of keeping time. Trains had caused the system in which major regional cities set their clocks according to local astronomical conditions obsolete. Fleming promoted a standard time and hourly zone variations from a primary location. He was instrumental in convening an International Prime Meridian Conference in Washington in 1884 at which the system of international standard time we have today was established. The Prime Meridian in the UK has existed since 1884.
From 1907 - 1916
Daylight Saving Time was promoted later by a London builder named William Willett (1857-1915) in his pamphlet, Waste of Daylight in 1907. He proposed advancing all clocks 20 minutes on each of four different Sundays in April, and slowing them by 20 minutes on four Sundays in September. While on an early morning a ride through Petts Wood, near Croydon, Willett had noticed that the blinds of the houses were all closed, even though the sun was up. He felt people should be up as well. In his pamphlet he wrote:
"Everyone appreciates the long, light evenings. Everyone laments their shortage as Autumn approaches; and everyone has given utterance to regret that the clear, bright light of an early morning during Spring and Summer months is so seldom seen or used."
Willett's became British Summer Time by a 1916 Act of Parliament. Clocks were set one hour ahead of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) during the summer months. England changed their clocks to save energy to help fuel World War I.
In 1918
In 1918, Congress made US rail zones official under federal law and gave the authority for all changes to the Interstate Commerce Commission. When Congress created the Department of Transportation in 1966, it transferred that responsibility for the time laws to the DOT.
1966 - 2007
The Daylight Saving Time law in the USA is the Uniform Time Act of 1966. The law does not require that anyone observe Daylight Saving Time; it just says is that if we are going to observe Daylight Saving Time, it must be done uniformly.
In 1918, in order to conserve resources for WWI, Congress placed the country on DST seven months from 1918 - 1919. The law was unpopular and was repealed. In WWII Congress reinstated DST (without a law) on February 9, 1942. Clocks were set ahead one hour to save energy year-round until September 30, 1945. States and cities were free, however, to ignore DST, causing transportation and media broadcasting confusion.
In England, the energy saving aspects of Daylight Saving were recognized again during WWII. Clocks were changed two hours ahead of GMT during the summer, which became known as Double Summer Time and remained one hour ahead of GMT though the winter.
By 1966, 100 million+ Americans observed DST locally. Congress established a nationwide DST pattern with the Uniform Time Act of 1966 (15 U.S. Code Section 260a), starting the last Sunday of April and ending the last Sunday of October. Any area wishing to be exempt from DST could pass a local ordinance. In the mid-1970s the Department of Transportation found that DST saves energy, saves lives and prevents traffic injuries, and prevents crime by providing more daylight hours. A 1986 Amendment [President Reagan, Public Law 99-359] changed DST to begin on the first Sunday in April. In 2007, DST began on March 11. Thus, there have been changes over the year. However, there are still complaints. Some Americans want to keep DST year-round and some others want to do away with it. For now, DST begins on the second Sunday in March and ends the first Sunday in November in most, but not all of, the USA.
Franch Drawing of a Railroad Yard in 1912
- DST Around the World
World Time Zones - A Walk Through Time
Time measurement through the ages.
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Comments
Wow! Thats amazing. When I requested this Hub I never thought that it went back a long time! This is really a great Hub. Very informative and interesting too. Thank you so much for the answer Patty. All the best to you. I really enjoyed reading this.
Thanks SunSeven! It was a fun Hub to do. Many blessings to you!
Hi Patty, In the other answer to this request livelonger left a link which I found interesting. I thought I will share it with you here. http://webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/g.html According to this site "While twins born at 11:55 p.m. and 12:05 a.m. may have different birthdays, Daylight Saving Time can change birth order -- on paper, anyway. During the time change in the fall, one baby could be born at 1:55 a.m. and the sibling born ten minutes later, at 1:05 a.m. In the spring, there is a gap when no babies are born at all: from 2:00 a.m. to 3:00 a.m."
That's very interesting and intriguing. Much of time seems to be a man-made quantity, doesn't it?
Apparently! I can imagine the chaos when people are not aware of these time changes where it is in practice. Like people missing trains, appointments, etc. There was an interesting(?!) incident in Israel when a time bomb went off and killed the terrorists themselves instead of the intended targets(two busloads of people). It happened because these terrorists were not aware of the time changes that took place.
How ironic! I don't like anyone (target or terrorist) to die in these bombings, but one thought that came to me was that the plan surely backfired, did it not? Amazing. it is always best not to blow anyone up.
I totally agree with you Patty. Perhaps people should practice more of non-violence in achieving their goals, like Mahatma Gandhi did.
Yes, non-violence and some persistence to change things from bad to good.
I thought I will share this with you. Recently I came across an article about a newspaper announcing a Daylight Saving Time contest to see who could save the most daylight. Which is in fact true! You can read about the whole story here http://www.snopes.com/humor/iftrue/daylight.asp
Best Regards
Thank you so much for this interesting article SunSeven!
Very interesting hub, thanks for going so in-depth!





Patty Inglish, MS says:
13 months ago
Incidentally, some of my ancestors worked their way west with the railroads, all the way to California from the UK, then the east coast of the US in the late 1700s and early 1800s. I wonder what they thought about Daylight Saving Time? While it is often said that DST was developed to allow for longer work hours on US farms, some believe that it was developed to create longer working hours for everyone - dawn to dusk and then some. There are many interesting and conflicting opinions.