Daylight Savings confusion 100-Years-Ago
Daylight Savings Time was initially adopted as a consequence of World War I. When the United States joined the war, she too, like her allies, implemented this mechanism to minimize the use of artificial light, first introduced by Germany on April 30, 1916.
In the United States, Daylight Savings Time was first implemented on March 31, 1918. The March 30, 1918 issue of The York Daily contained the front-page article:
“P. K. Devers, who has charge of the court house clock, will set it forward after it strikes 9 o’clock tonight. When the clock next strikes it will sound 11. It will be one hour ahead of time when the bells of the city are rung at midnight, but will be on the regular schedule of all clocks of the county at 2 a.m., Sunday morning, old time, when it will strike the new time hour 3 o’clock.”
As a point of interest, P. K. Devers, is Philip Kissinger Devers, the father of 4-Star General Jake Devers, born and raised in York. As a young boy, Jake often accompanied his father on weekly visits to maintain the clock atop the York County Courthouse.
The previous day, March 29, 1918, Mayor Hugentugler of York issued a proclamation about implementing Daylight Savings Time:
“To the citizens of York: As the saving of an hour of daylight each day this summer, as authorized by congressional enactment, becomes effective Sunday March 31, and believing that some confusion on the part of the public may be caused unless all cooperate to make the new system of time a success. I, as mayor of the city of York, most respectfully call upon all owners of industrial plants, to sound the whistles of their plants, and all churches to ring their bells, at 12 o’clock Saturday night.”
“I believe this is the best way in which the public can be reminded to turn on their clocks and watches to 1 a.m. and which will also announce to our citizens the arrival of Easter morning. The hearty cooperation of all our citizens is most earnestly requested so that when we arise on Sunday morning, the new system of time will be in vogue, and no confusion on the part of the public will be experienced. (Signed) E. S. Hugentugler, Mayor.”
In York County, as in the rest of the nation, there were articles blaming confusion that ensued on everything from: Germany for first implementing “this crazy scheme,” to our government for following in kind. After World War I ended, Daylight Savings Time was repealed in the United States. It returned briefly during WWII, plus locally and regionally around the country at other times, before being adopted nationally in 1966.
Links to related posts include: