On 2019-09-07 03:36, Alois Treindl wrote:
On 07.09.19 11:29, Alois Treindl wrote:
Changes to past and future time zone abbreviations
For Alaska time from 1900 through 1967, instead of "CAT" use the abbreviation "AST", the abbreviation commonly used at the time (Atlantic Standard Time had not been standardized yet). Use "AWT" and "APT" instead of the invented abbreviations "CAWT" and "CAPT". And in Canada, AST stands for Atlantic Standard Time, 4h west of GMT
It appears Atlantic standard time was used in Canada prior to 1888, as that was standardized and named in PEI legislation that (regnal) year in the linked article below. J.RASC Vol.XXVI, No.2, Whole No.211, February, 1932, pp.49-77, Standard Time and Time Zones in Canada, C.C.Smith, Dominion Observatory, Ottawa, Jun, 1931, pp.76-77 gives the Provincial and Territorial legal references for time zones and daylight times across Canada, following the end of the federal 1918 Daylight Saving Act which lapsed at the end of that year. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1932JRASC..26...49S http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?1932JRASC..26.... For PEI, the enacting Statute 52 Victoria, Chap.11, Sec.1 defining time at the 60th meridian as Atlantic standard time, passed in 1888-9 in the 52nd year of Victoria's reign; the New Brunswick Interpretation Act 1903 standarized on 60W; in NWT and Quebec, 68W and points east were standardized on GMT-4. The part of the Standard Times tables on p.61 designates Atlantic and enumerates the countries and islands observing that standard, and is taken by permission from the UK Nautical Almanac (of 1930 or 1931). Provincial legislation passed in the 1920s also allowed provincial Lieutenant Governors in Council to pass Orders in Council, limiting the application of regulations as to time and place, as regarding daylight saving time when requested by municipalities, and in 1930 that was in effect only in Halifax, NS, St.John, NB, Regina, SK, municipalities in S.ON and Quebec between Quebec City and Windsor, ON; not in PEI, MB, AB, BC. -- Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis, Calgary, Alberta, Canada This email may be disturbing to some readers as it contains too much technical detail. Reader discretion is advised.