If your forgot to re-set your clocks last night, you are probably already late for church or at least late retrieving
the Sunday paper from the stoop.
It happens every year, no
matter how many announcements are
made on the TV news, radio, newspapers, and now by cute Facebook memes. And some of the folks who did fiddle with their time pieces get it wrong—is it spring
forward, fall back or the other way around?
It’s vexing. And some think, foolish. Take to oft
quoted bit of folk wisdom usually ascribed
to some Native American sage—Daylight Savings Time is like cutting a strip off the bottom of the
blanket and sewing it to the top
and thinking you have a longer blanket.
Perhaps. But maybe there is something to it. People have
been doing it, or something very like it, for a long time.
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Roman water clocks operated on some version of water dripping from an inverted cone and filling a cistern. In this ingenious device the pointing figure is on a float and as water rises in the cistern to gestures to wrings on the cone. On many such clock the rings, or marks in the cistern itself, were numbered with winter and summer hours, leading archeologists to determine that something analogous to Daylight Savings Time was in use in the Empire for at least part of its existence.Way back when togas were in fashion,
those wily old Romans had water clocks inscribed with two sets of
numerals—one for summer and one
for winter. And all of those years when there essentially were no clocks, peasants and farmers regulated their
lives by the sun—beginning their
days with its rise and ending their labors with its setting. All pretty much the same idea as DST.
In the U.S. Benjamin Franklin usually gets the credit--or the blame--for Daylight Savings Time. But no one acted on his proposal for about 150 years.
Benjamin
Franklin, an early riser and frugal man,
is sometimes credited with the idea. He wanted to save money on candles. Minister to France in 1782 he found
time to publish an essay, An
Economical Project for Diminishing the Cost of Light. He proposed
adjusting hours to rise earlier
in the warm months so that work could be illuminated through an open
window, not by costly bee’s wax
candles. But no one took him up on his utilitarian
proposal.
A similar notion was floated
by New Zealand entomologist George
Vernon Hudson more than a century later in 1895. In a paper presented to the Wellington Philosophical Society he proposed a two-hour shift forward in
October and a two-hour shift back in
March. There was some interest,
but two hours probably seemed like a
drastic, wrenching change. Nobody picked up his idea.
In 1905 Englishman William Willett came up with a gentler approach. He
proposed moving the clocks 20 minutes
forward each of four Sundays in April, and switching them back by the
same amount on four Sundays in September. This, he reasoned would allow for gradual adjustment, much the same as naturally rising and beginning work with
the Sun. Liberal Member of Parliament
Robert Pearce introduced the first
Daylight Saving Bill to the House of
Commons on February 12, 1908. And
there it languished, year after year
despite constant lobbying and public appeals by Willett right up to
his death in 1915.
As is so often the case, it took a war to accelerate innovation. World
War I, to be exact. Imperial German instituted Sommerzeit—Summer Time—as a fuel conservation war measure on April 30, 1916. Britain and France soon followed. Russia did it in 1917. And when the U.S. decided to go Over There, the Wilson administration adopted it in 1918.
The United States quickly abandoned Daylight Savings time after
the war. Farmers, who had once regulated
their lives by the sun, now complained
that the cows needed milking and the chickens demanded to be fed at set,
familiar hours which were disrupted
by the sudden hour changes. But then
farmers tend to be traditionalists
and despise any change. But they were a powerful political force.
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed,
War Time on February 9, 1939. It essentially was year-round Daylight Savings Time.
In Britain, where fuel was at a
premium, Double Summer Time was
applied which moved the clocks two hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) during the summer and one hour ahead of GMT
during the winter. America abandoned its
War Time in September of 1945.
After the War, many states, and sometime local jurisdictions, continued to use
Daylight Savings Time in the warmer months.
Starting and ending dates varied
and the result was a patch work map
of Daylight and Standard Time. It was hell
on railroads and airlines, who needed consistent schedules, inconvenient for the national broadcasting networks, and a pain
in the ass a lot of folks who found their jobs and residences in different times.
A clamor grew to straighten
the whole damn mess out. But no compromise could be found between
those who wanted to return to year-round
Standard Time and those who wanted uniform
Daylight Savings Time in warmer months.
Congress
finally adopted the Uniform Time Act of 1966 providing that
DST would begin on the last Sunday of
April and end on the last Sunday of
October. States could, however, still
opt out by passing a local law.
And of course, some did. It led to problems. Indiana,
in thrall to it farmers stubbornly clung
to Standard Time. Most of the state
was in the Eastern Zone. But
a corner of the state around Gary and Hammond in the northwest was in the Central Zone. That meant
when DST would go into effect in
neighboring Illinois, the area became an island out of sync with both the
rest of its state and with the Chicago
metropolitan area with which it was economically
tied. Similar time islands were
found elsewhere.
After the Energy Crisis brought about by the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973, Congress passed emergency legislation extending
uniform Daylight Savings time for 10
months in 1974. After howls of protest that children were waiting for school busses in
the dark, that was rolled back to 8
months a year later. In ’76 DST
reverted to beginning on the last Sunday in April.
But Congress was not done tinkering. Energy conservation benefits of DST were evident. In 1985 it pushed the start date back to the first Sunday in April. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 extended DST
by about one month starting on the second
Sunday in March and ending on the first
Sunday in November. That went into effect in 2007.
Today most of the US observes DST
except for Hawaii and most of Arizona, and Puerto Rico, the US Virgin
Islands, American Samoa, and Guam.
And, oh year folks from Gary no longer have to change their watches every time they drive across the Illinois border.
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