Enlightenment · Europe · Science

1714

Longitude Act

July 8, 1714

Parliament, still haunted by the Scilly wrecks, offered twenty thousand pounds to anyone who could determine longitude at sea within half a degree. Astronomers scoffed at the prize going to a mere clockmaker. A Yorkshire carpenter's son, John Harrison, set aside his church-tower clocks and began to build timepieces for the ocean.