Next week on Sunday, clocks will “spring forward” an hour to Daylight Saving time, marking the beginnings of the upcoming spring season.
Clocks are scheduled to spring forward an hour at 2 a.m. Sunday, March 12 resulting in the sun rising and setting an hour later.
Daylight Saving Time was first proposed back in 1895 by a New Zealand Scientist George Vernon Hudson and British builder William Willett.
In 1895, Hudson presented a paper to the Wellington Philosophical Society, proposing a two-hour shift forward in October and a two-hour shift back in March, according to Time and Date.
“There was interest in the idea, but it was never followed through,” according to Time and Date.
In 1905, independently from Hudson, Willett suggested setting the clocks ahead 20 minutes on each of the four Sundays in April, and switching them back by the same amount on each of the four Sundays in September, a total of eight time switches per year.
According to Time and Date, the first group of individuals to implement Daylight Saving were the residents of Port Arthur, Ontario, now known as Thunder Bay, turned their clocks forward by one hour to start the world’s first Daylight Saving Time period on July 1 1908.
In the following years different parts of Canada started to follow suit in Daylight Saving Time.
However, the time change did not start to trend globally until 1916, according to officials.
Clocks in the German Empire, and its ally Austria, were turned ahead by one hour on April 30, 1916, two years into World War I, according to Time and Date
The rationale was to minimize the use of artificial lighting to save fuel for the war effort.
Within a few weeks, the idea was followed by the United Kingdom, France and many other countries.
Most of them reverted to standard time after World War I, and it was not until the next World War that Daylight Saving Time made its return in most of Europe.
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