Longitude is probably one of the most important scientific solutions of the modern era. It was easy to work off a set of common star charts and figure out how far north or south of the equator you were. Take a couple readings at sunrise, midday and sunset, chart a few stars, and wham there you are. We’ve been measuring that for millenia now. But Longitude was a lot harder. By the early 18th century, it had become such a problem for sea-faring nations that the King of England set forth a prize to determine the best way of calculating it. Enter John Harrison and his clocks. If you can keep accurate enough time, you can determine your longitude. It took decades of engineering, and the promise of riches (in some cases denied, read Dava Sobel’s Longitude, which is a fascinating historiography of the events surrounding the prize.)

The thing about Longitude that is most interesting is that there’s no clear and obvious choice for a prime meridian, the way there is with latitude and the Equator. Thus, common standards of practice evolved, with prime meridians, and associated maps, appearing at Greenwich, Paris, Rome, and various other European centers. Each set of charts was keyed to use with a specific set of longitudes, with no common standard. Thus it was that Thomas Jefferson set the first American Meridian through the center of the Executive Mansion in 1793. This meridian would stay in place through 1850 when it was moved west 8 blocks to 24th Street at the site of the Naval Observatory (now the grounds of the US Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery at 24th and D Streets) where it remained the American line of demarcation and measurement until 1884 when we moved to the Greenwich Standard by International Treaty.

But why have an American Meridian when Greenwich’s would do? The only good way to measure longitude was to take a clock, synchronized from Greenwich’s observatory master clock, and sail it across the Atlantic. Sure, that sounds pretty straight forward, but clocks, even as late as the early 19th century were not anything we’d considerate accurate to the second, not to mention had all kinds of mechanical issues even if you sailed them across the sea. Not to mention the fact that two journeys could come up with two totally different longitudes for the final result. Thus, setting a local point of demarcation allowed for a better continuity of result.

Three reminders remain here in DC of this peculiar historio-technical dispute: Meridian Hill Park on 16th Street in DC is named for the Stone Obelisk that was erected here along the original prime meridian in 1804. While the stone itself is long since gone, 16th Street remains the original American Meridian, and the park named thereafter remains. The Meridian monument pictured above is at the corner of 24th and H Street NW on the campus of George Washington University. The line there depicted with engraved stone is along the line through the Old Naval Observatory, and was the line of demarcation for the creation of the borders of several states. The third artifact of the pre-Greenwich age is the “Zero milestone” which sits on the original White House meridian on the Northern Side of the Ellipse and was to have been the Zero Milemarker for all American Highways.

The interesting thing about all of this geographical confusion is that the borders of several states (including any with a straight north-south line created or altered after 1850 and before 1912, when the American Meridian was formally dismissed by act of Congress.) were determined by the American Meridian at Washington, as the only group to seriously use the standard instead of the Meridian at Greenwich were surveyors. Oregon would be the first to truly use the American Meridian in 1859 when it became a state. The southeastern border of the new state would be 42 Degrees West of the American Meridian. Colorado Territory in 1861 would be next to use the Meridian, establishing it’s eastern (27°W, Am) and western (34°W, Am) borders with the meridian.

I’ll leave to the reader the task of figuring out why perhaps the American Meridian never took off at sea, and posit that a quick look into Actor Network Theory might prove interesting.

So, when you say to your out of town friends and family that this really is the center of everything, take them over to GW and show them the meridian, and point out that was once legally true. While the monument itself is a bit over-the-top, talking about the two hemispheres, Atlantic and American, it’s still nice to know that we still keep witness to it.

Many thanks to Geographical Review (login required), DCist, Wikipedia, and the Library of Congress for helping source this article.

Tom Bridge I live and work in the District of Columbia. I write at We Love DC, a blog I helped start, I work at Technolutionary, a company I helped start, and I’m happy doing both. I enjoy watching baseball, cooking, and gardening. I grow a mean pepper, keep a clean scorebook, and wash the dishes when I’m done. Read Why I Love DC.