Industrial Age · Europe · Science

1884

Greenwich Prime Meridian

1884

The International Meridian Conference in Washington, after some French sulking, adopted the line running through the Royal Observatory at Greenwich as the zero of longitude and the basis of world time. Railways, telegraphs, and shipping had made a unified time necessary. The British Empire, conveniently, got it. France abstained from the final vote and continued using the Paris meridian on its charts for another twenty-seven years.