British Summer Time begins again at 1.00am on Sunday 27 March, with the nation losing an hour of potential lie-in

British Summer Time (BST) begins once again at 1.00am on Sunday 27 March, when you are obliged to put your clock forward by an hour to 2.00am. Not only do you lose an hour’s sleep, you also get to spend thirty minutes once you are awake on a Sunday morning trying to work out how to change the clock on the microwave and the washing machine if you have them.

The ritual owes its origins in the UK to the first world war. The annual hourly changing of the clock was first established in the UK more than 100 years ago under the Summer Time Act 1916, with the thought that lighter evenings might preserve fuel for the war effort.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Australia v India: second one-day international – live!

Updates from the second match of the series Start time at the…

From The Office to Severance: how the fictional workplace went from bad to worse

On International Workers’ Day, we chart the cultural changes from moments of…