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Daylight Saving Time was first adopted in the United States in 1918. There were many trial runs with Daylight Saving Time, but finally in 1966, the Uniform Time Act was passed. Since then there have been a few revisions, but it has remained more consistent than in the early days.

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9y ago
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15y ago

IN 1992 It the United States, it went national on the last Sunday in April 1967, but some states observed it before then. States had the right to opt out. Arizona and part of Indiana did so. Today, Arizona is the only state that does not observe DST.

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13y ago

Benjamin Franklin first suggested Daylight Saving Time in 1784, but modern DST was not proposed until 1895 when an entomologist from New Zealand, George Vernon Hudson, presented a proposal for a two-hour daylight saving shift to the Wellington Philosophical Society.

The conception of DST was mainly credited to an English builder, William Willett in 1905, when he presented the idea to advance the clock during the summer months. His proposal was published two years later and introduced to the House of Commons in February 1908. The first Daylight Saving Bill was examined by a select committee but was never made into a law. It wasn't until World War I, in 1916, that DST was adopted and implemented by several countries in Europe who initially rejected the idea.

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11y ago

In March and November

Not counting the special temporary situations in response to World War II and the oil crisis of the 1970's, the Daylight Saving Time (DST) schedule has been changed three times in the United States.

From 1955 to 1962, the end of DST was changed from from the last Sunday of September to the last Sunday of October. Since that was before the passage of the Uniform Time Act of 1966, the change did not occur at one time across the country, but one or two areas at a time adopted the schedule change until it was eventually nationwide.

The Uniform Time Act of 1966 required that the whole country follow the same DST schedule: beginning on the last Sunday of April and ending on the last Sunday of October. However, it also allows each state to pass a law opting out of DST observance. The Act took effect in 1967.

The Act was amended in the 1980s to change the beginning of DST from the last Sunday of April to the first Sunday of April beginning in 1987.

The Energy Policy Act of 2005 changed the beginning of DST from the first Sunday of April to the second Sunday of March and changed the end of DST from the last Sunday of October to the first Sunday of November. That took effect in 2007.

I noticed that there's a pattern to the timing of the acts. I personally hope they decide to do away with this silliness altogether in 2027, if not sooner.

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14y ago

Daylight time was first enacted in Germany in 1915, then quickly adopted by Britain and much of Europe and Canada.

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15y ago

1986

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12y ago

1918

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Q: When was Daylight Saving Time enacted?
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