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How and Who dertemined that Daylight Savings time had to change...and why should we believe them??? I mean really think abou it......it's been the 1st Sunday of April since 4ever, now all of a sudden, it's happening a whole month earlier???? WHY? Is this the next Y2K scare?

2007-03-07 07:20:30 · 7 answers · asked by Lishi 2 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

7 answers

It was invented or created by Benjamin Frankin and it is not universally used. For example, Phoenix Arizona spends 6 months with the same time as California and for 6 months they are an hour ahead of California. (Fun, huh)

Richard Nixon suspended Dayliights Savings time for one year trying to conserve on energy but ended it after parents got angry that they were sending their children to school in the morning while it was still dark.

2007-03-07 07:31:26 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I believe Congress voted to change the traditional daylight savings dates. They believed the changes will save energy costs by having daylight longer into the day. This will reduce power consumption as people will not need to turn on lights as early.

2007-03-07 07:32:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Forgotten Inventor of sunlight hours Saving the concept became particularly contrived in 1907 by technique of William Willet, an English living house builder. Willett became driving his horse through the almost abandoned streets of London contained in the early hours of the morning even as he wondered why such truly some human beings were nonetheless asleep even as the solar became already shining. Willett concept human beings could be in good structure – and happier - if uncovered to a distinct hour of image voltaic on a daily basis, and he also worked out the commercial implications – in accordance to him, England on my own could keep £ 2.5 million each and each year. inspite of huge lobbying and the help of popular Britons, jointly with Winston Churchill, Willet’s theory became in no way taken heavily until eventually after his death. In 1917, the determination became made lower than the “protection of the area Act” to strengthen the clocks contained in the united kingdom by technique of an hour each and each year, in part because of the favor to maintain coal in the course of the first global conflict. contained in the united kingdom, the hot “time” grew to develop into familiar – perhaps hopefully - as British summer season time. Britain’s enemy, Germany, had already effectively followed the theory of fixing the clocks as a way to maintain potential. interior many years, maximum international locations in Europe had followed some version of sunlight hours Saving Time. In 1917 aspects of Canada and Australia also initiated it. right this moment, Willett, whose some distance accomplishing contribution to historic previous is often neglected, is buried contained in the picturesque London cemetery of Petts timber, with a memorial interior this kind of a sundial set completely to sunlight Saving Time. a close-by pub named “the sunlight hours motel” also commemorates Willet’s success.

2016-12-05 09:18:21 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It was decided by space aliens in collaboration with Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster. Think about it.. who else could have come up with such a diabolical plot against those evil computers???

2007-03-07 07:26:22 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Idea of Daylight Saving Time

The idea of daylight saving was first conceived by Benjamin Franklin (portrait at right) during his sojourn as an American delegate in Paris in 1784, in an essay, "An Economical Project." Read more about Franklin's essay.

Some of Franklin's friends, inventors of a new kind of oil lamp, were so taken by the scheme that they continued corresponding with Franklin even after he returned to America.

The idea was first advocated seriously by London builder William Willett (1857-1915) in the pamphlet, "Waste of Daylight" (1907), that proposed advancing clocks 20 minutes on each of four Sundays in April, and retarding them by the same amount on four Sundays in September. As he was taking an early morning a ride through Petts Wood, near Croydon, Willett was struck by the fact that the blinds of nearby houses were closed, even though the sun was fully risen. When questioned as to why he didn't simply get up an hour earlier, Willett replied with typical British humor, "What?" In his pamphlet "The Waste of Daylight" 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."




The History of Time Zones

Standard time the time of a town, region or country that is established by law or general usage as civil time. It is determined locally. The whole of China, one of the largest countries in the world, has decided to adopt a single time zone

The concept of standard time was adopted in the late 19th century in an attempt to end the confusion that was caused by each community's use of its own solar time. Some such standard became increasingly necessary with the development of rapid railway systems and the consequent confusion of schedules that used scores of different local times kept in separate communities. (Local time varies continuously with change in longitude.)

The need for a standard time was felt most particularly in the United States and Canada, where several extensive railway routes passed through places that differed by several hours in local time.

Sir Sandford Fleming, a Canadian railway planner and engineer, outlined a plan for worldwide standard time in the late 1870s. Following this initiative, in 1884 delegates from 27 nations met in Washington, D.C., for the Meridian Conference and agreed on a system basically the same as that now in use.

The present system employs 24 standard meridians of longitude (lines running from the North Pole to the South, at right angles to the Equator) 15º apart, starting with the prime meridian through Greenwich, England. These meridians are theoretically the centres of 24 standard time zones; in practice, the zones have in many cases been subdivided or altered in shape for the convenience of inhabitants.

Time is the same throughout each zone and differs from the international basis of legal and scientific time, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) or Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), by an integral number of hours; minutes and seconds are the same.

In a few regions, however, the legal time kept is not that of one of the 24 standard time zones because half-hour or quarter-hour differences are in effect there.

Websites
Sir Sandford Fleming: website
Sir Sandford Fleming: website

2007-03-07 07:54:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Thank your congress. They tacked it on an energy bill about a year ago.

2007-03-07 07:31:06 · answer #6 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

I decided actually. Do you have a problem with it ?

2007-03-07 07:36:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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