![]() ![]() After two presidential vetoes, DST was finally killed by a two-thirds vote in Congress, overriding President Wilson’s refusal. “Repeal the law and have the clocks proclaim God’s time and tell the truth!” proclaimed a Mississippi congressman after the end of World War I. ![]() The United States repealed Daylight Saving Time. (Railroad workers were against it, too they worried that the time change would lead to confusion and cause deadly crashes.) It’s a myth! Farmers actually fought against the practice of DST, because it meant less time for milking cows or taking crops to market. We’ve all heard it: more daylight meant more time to work the fields. It is not true that America started observing Daylight Saving Time for the sake of farmers’ workdays. ![]() A couple of states have thought about putting the practice aside (namely, Massachusetts and Maine - sadly, Virginia doesn’t seem to be considering it), but they haven’t bitten the bullet yet. People who live in Hawaii and Arizona never change their clocks. Not every state in the USA observes Daylight Saving Time. Researchers concluded in 2007 that while DST does save on energy for lighting, it also increases the use of electricity for heating and cooling. (They did it to save fuel for factories during World War I.)ĭaylight Saving Time does not, in fact, save energy. ![]() It is believed to have begun in Britain, but Germany was actually the first country to have recorded observing DST in May 1916. It’s a myth that America was the first country to practice Daylight Saving Time. ![]()
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