Nobody
was really sure what time it was on this day in 1918. It was the
beginning of "daylight savings time."
Federal
law stated that at 2 A.M. on April first, everyone needed to set
their clocks ahead one hour. It was a plan enacted to extend daylight
an hour later during summer evenings, giving farmers an extra hour
of work time during their growing season. Many were skeptical.
The
Rutland Herald speculated that the time change would adversely affect
railroad scheduling, and went on to say: "just how Rutland
- and the rest of the country - is going to lose the hour of time...is
puzzling more than a few residents."
Image
courtesy the Vermont
Historical Society.
April Archives | April 2 |
Somehow, the Rutland Railroad and the Rutland Depot survived
the first Daylight Savings Time adjustment on this day in 1918.
|