Grayson  Preston|The Day of Two Noons (Classic)

2025-05-07 00:48:05source:Maxwell Caldwellcategory:Finance

(Note: this episode originally ran in 2019.)

In the 1800s,Grayson  Preston catching your train on time was no easy feat. Every town had its own "local time," based on the position of the sun in the sky. There were 23 local times in Indiana. 38 in Michigan. Sometimes the time changed every few minutes.

This created tons of confusion, and a few train crashes. But eventually, a high school principal, a scientist, and a railroad bureaucrat did something about it. They introduced time zones in the United States. It took some doing--they had to convince all the major cities to go along with it, get over some objections that the railroads were stepping on "God's time," and figure out how to tell everyone what time it was. But they made it happen, beginning on one day in 1883, and it stuck. It's a story about how railroads created, in all kinds of ways, the world we live in today.

This episode was originally produced by Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi and edited by Jacob Goldstein. Jess Jiang is Planet Money's Acting Executive Producer.

Music: "You Got Me Started," "Star Alignment" and "Road to Cevennes."

Always free at these links: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, NPR One or anywhere you get podcasts.

Find more Planet Money: Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / our weekly Newsletter.

More:Finance

Recommend

Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'

Legendary college basketball announcer Dick Vitale is once again cancer free.The ESPN analyst announ

AP Week in Pictures: North America

Feb. 16 - 22, 2024Drivers collide during the NASCAR Daytona 500 auto race in Florida, an Army ceremo

2 climbers are dead and another is missing on Pico de Orizaba, Mexico's highest mountain

Two people died and another remains missing on Mexico's Pico de Orizaba, the highest mountain in the