Remembering when we set our clocks to ‘war time’

When time changed during the Manhattan Project, the clocks went to ‘war’

November 4, 2021

Placeholder Image

“Congress instituted ‘war time’ by law in 1942,” explains Nicholas Lewis, a historian with the National Security Research Center, the Lab's classified library. “It actually had a precedent from World War I, instituted in 1918. That law was repealed after that war, but that was where the time zones we know today originated.”

The 1942 law standardized the time change across the United States. “During the World War II period of daylight saving time, or ‘war time,’ nicknames of the time zones reflected that change, being called Eastern War Time, Pacific War Time, and so on,” says Lewis.

He adds, “The various Manhattan Project sites would have followed their local time zone’s ‘war time.’ So, Project Y at Los Alamos would have been on Mountain War Time.”

For a deeper dive into the history of time changes, read this article from the Department of Defense.

Share
More In This Issue
E for excellenceSave the date! Night with a Nerd: ‘Jews in theory’ with Jack ShlachterThe Periodic Table goes into hibernationAll Stories

More @theBradbury Stories

@theBradbury Home
Army Navy E Award Shrink 78eeb Opt 78eeb Card

E for excellence

After WWII’s end, the Army and Navy commended the secret Los Alamos lab

0928jacklilypads Ec260 Opt Ec260 Card

Save the date! Night with a Nerd: ‘Jews in theory’ with Jack Shlachter

The BSMA’s program looks at many notable Jewish leaders of the 1945 Theoretical Division

Sandoval Table Opt 42825 Card

The Periodic Table goes into hibernation

You can still talk science at the Tub with the Bradbury’s director throughout winter

Pasqualoni Carousel Opt 878bb Card

Giving thanks: Keeping our guides, visitors safe

Medical director Pasqualoni’s guidelines helped us reconnect with care

Anomalies at The Bradbury Opt 5ec1a Card

ICYMI: ‘Anomalies at the Bradbury’

Could the Bradbury team have a paranormal mystery on its hands?