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## This continues summer time throughout the year after it starts in 1940.# It says nothing about extent and has no consequential changes.## - An Order in Council amending the The Defence (Summer Time) Regulations,#   1939, SR&O 1941 No. 476## This introduces double summer time, starting at 01:00 GMT on the day after# the first Saturday in May and ending at 01:00 GMT on the day after the# second Saturday in August, offset another hour from normal summer time,# which continues throughout the rest of the year. It goes on a lot about# consequential changes to agricultural wages legislation, and says in part# `... and in its application to Northern Ireland have effect as# if for the references to the Agricultural Wages (Regulation) Acts, 1924 and# 1940, there were substituted references to the Agricultural Wages (Regulation)# Acts (Northern Ireland), 1939 and 1940, ...'. It also has a similar section# for Scotland. Both sections substitute the local Agricultural Wages Board# for the Agricultural Wages Board for England and Wales, showing that# England and Wales were indivisible.## - An Order in Council amending the The Defence (Summer Time) Regulations,#   1939, SR&O 1942 No. 506## This changes the start date of double summer time to the day after the first# Saturday in April. It says nothing about extent.## - An Order in Council amending the The Defence (Summer Time) Regulations,#   1939, SR&O 1944 No. 932## This changed the end date of double summer time to 17 September 1944.# (I don't have the text of this, just a note of what it did, the text almost# certainly had the `day after the nth Saturday' form.)## (I am missing whatever regulations there were to change things in 1945# and the Summer Time Act, 1947.)## - The British Standard Time Act, 1968## This came into force on 27 October 1968 and continued summer time throughout# the year as an experiment until it expired on 31 October 1971.# There was no double summer time so we didn't have to change the clocks at all.# It specifically said it applied to Northern Ireland. It also said it# applied to Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man unless they passed# measures saying it didn't.## - The Manx Time Act, 1968## This is an Act of Tynwald (the Isle of Man Parliament) that said that# henceforth Manx time would be the same as the time in Great Britain.## - The Summer Time Act, 1972## This specified a reversion to normal summer time behaviour with a start# date of the day after the third Saturday in March, unless that is Easter,# when it is the day after the second Saturday, and an end date of the day# after the fourth Saturday in October. Times are at 02:00 GMT, offset is# 1 hour.## It has the same wording about extent as the British Standard Time Act, 1968,# applying to Northern Ireland unconditionally and to Jersey, Guernsey and the# Isle of Man if they don't do something about it.## (I am missing various Summer Time Orders that modified the 1972 Act to# harmonise with the EC since 1981. The major change is that the time changes# to 01:00 GMT.)## - The Summer Time Order, 1992, SI 1992/1729 [SI == Statutary Instrument]## This specifies dates of:#       Start       End# 1993  28 March    24 October# 1994  27 March    23 October# All start and end times are at 01:00 GMT.# This is as far as it goes at present. A new EC directive is expected soon# and this will lead to a new Summer Time Order implementing it in the UK.## - Some text on the extent of Acts, from Halsbury's Statutes## `An Act of the United Kingdom Parliament is to be construed prima facie# to apply to the whole of the United Kingdom and not to any place outside.# [...] The expression "United Kingdom" for this purpose includes (since# 1922) Great Britain (ie. England, Wales and Scotland) and Northern Ireland,# but it does not include the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man.'## So, many of these measures specifically include Northern Ireland,# the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man. None of them exclude any# part of the UK. The default interpretation of Acts is that they apply# throughout the UK.## With that, I rest my case Milud :-)## Thanks are due to my learned legal friend Lorna Montgomerie, who dug out# the dusty old statutes, and to Melanie Allison of the Ministry of Defence,# who provided the wartime regulations and a snippet of Hansard explaining# why double summer time started on a Monday in 1945 (it was Easter).# From Peter Ilieve <peter@memex.co.uk> (November 18, 1993)## Here is a revised version of my tabrules file for the perl script I sent# before. I have personally verified the various Orders back to 1953 and# all the Acts.## There are no changes to the dates we already have.## My doubt about an early start in 1967 on 18 Feb was misplaced, the Order# does say 18 Feb. This is an interesting case as the first Order gave a# different date of 7 April 1967 for the Isle of Man but this was changed# before it came into effect by another Order for the Isle of Man alone.## I don't think I will be able to find any more of the earlier Orders.# The annual volumes for 1949--52 do not contain the various Summer Time# Orders. They therefore don't appear in the index. They rate a mention in# italics in the numerical list at the start but that is all.# I think what happens is that the annual volume is produced well after the# end of the year in question, by which time the Summer Time Order is spent.# They assume that nobody would ever be stupid enough to want to see it# again so they leave it out.## It might be a good idea to put this table, or the output of tabscript# showing all the moves because of Easter, in the europe file comments in# place of my old transcription of the Green Paper table [the UK Government# paper "Summer Time: A Consultation Document" (HMSO Cm722 June 1989)].## The next thing on the horizon is the 7th EC/EU directive and the matching# UK Order. I expect I will keep quiet until then.### 		Peter Ilieve		peter@memex.co.uk### ## control file for tabscript, a program to generate UK summer time dates# ## matching the table in Cm 722, the 1989 Green Paper.# ## Lines like this are comments.# ## Lines with a single # at the start are copied into the output# ## Control lines are of the form# ## <years> <start date> <end date> <flags> <double start> <double end># ## <years> is either a single year or a hyphen separated range, with --# ## also accepted as I use this in TeX a lot.# ## <start date> and <end date> are a digit followed bu a month name.# ## It is either an nth Saturday or an explicit date, depending on <flags>.# ## 0 and/or none are used when there is no date, as during 1968--71.# ## <flags> can contain `fixed' to indicate explicit dates and `double'# ## to indicate double summer time dates are present.# ## At present double requires fixed as well.# ## <double start> and <double end> are like the start and end dates, with# ## the exception of the 0 and/or none feature.## ## Blank lines are also ignored.## ## Places where I am uncertain, not having personally verified the dates# ## against the Act or Order, are marked ???# ## These dates are taken from the Cm 722 table.## # Summer Time Act, 1916# 1916 21 May 1 October fixed## ## I haven't yet looked for Orders for 1916--22 and I doubt I will find them.# # unknown Order or Orders ???# 1917 8 apr 17 sep fixed# 1918 24 mar 30 sep fixed# 1919 30 mar 29 sep fixed# # end date extended in 1920 from 27 Sep because of coal strike (from Cm 722)# 1920 28 mar 25 oct fixed# 1921 3 apr 3 oct fixed## # Summer Time Act, 1922# # came into force 22 July 1922, too late for 1922, so missing Order ???# 1922 26 mar 8 oct fixed# 1923-1924 3 April 3 September## # Summer Time Act, 1925# 1925--1938 3 April 1 October## # Defence (Summer Time) Regulations, 1939# 1939 3 April 3 November# # 1940 amendment (SR&O 1940 Nos. 172 & 1883)# 1940 4 feb 0 none# # 1941 amendment (SR&O 1941 No. 476)# 1941 0 none 0 none fixed,double 4 may 10 aug# # 1942 amendment (SR&O 1942 No. 506)# 1942 0 none 0 none fixed,double 5 apr 9 aug# 1943 0 none 0 none fixed,double 4 apr 15 aug# # 1944 amendment (SR&O 1944 No. 932)# 1944 0 none 0 none fixed,double 2 apr 17 sep# # 1945 dates from Hansard, Oral Answers, 1 March 1945# 1945 0 none 7 oct fixed,double 2 apr 15 jul## # reversion to Summer Time Act, 1925# 1946 3 April 1 October## # Summer Time Act, 1947# # Fixed dates for 1947 only, gives power to have double summer time# 1947 16 mar 2 nov fixed,double 13 apr 10 aug# ## I can't find any trace of the Order for 1948.# # Unknown Order ???# 1948 14 mar 31 oct fixed# ## I know the numbers for the 1949--52 ones but the text is missing from the# ## annual volumes. I also don't know if the 49 Order was for 49 or 50, etc.# # Summer Time Order, 1949 (SI1949/373) ???# 1949 3 apr 30 oct fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1950 (SI1950/518) ???# 1950 16 apr 22 oct fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1951 (SI1951/430) ???# 1951 15 apr 21 oct fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1952 (SI1952/451) ???# 1952 20 apr 26 oct fixed## # reversion to Summer Time Act, 1925# 1953--1960 3 April 1 October## ## All Orders from here on specify fixed dates, not day after nth Sunday# ## Start pattern looks like Mar lastSun up to 1963, Mar Sun>=19 up to 1967.# ## End pattern looks like Oct Sun>=23 up to 1967.# # Summer Time Order, 1961 (SI1961/71)# 1961 26 March 29 October fixed# # Summer Time (1962) Order, 1961 (SI1961/2465)# 1962 25 Mar 28 Oct fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1963 (SI1963/81)# 1963 31 March 27 October fixed# # Summer Time (1964) Order, 1963 (SI1963/2101)# 1964 22 March 25 October fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1964 (SI1964/1201)# 1965 21 Mar 24 Oct fixed# 1966 20 Mar 23 Oct fixed# 1967 19 Mar 29 Oct fixed# # Summer Time Order, 1967 (SI1967/1148)# # Specifies different start date of 7 April for Isle of Man# # Summer Time Order, 1968 (SI1968/117)# # Changes Isle of Man start date to 18 Feb to match rest of UK# # British Standard Time Act, 1968# 1968 18 feb 0 none fixed# 1969--1970 0 none 0 none# 1971 0 none 31 oct fixed## # Summer Time Act, 1972# 1972-1980 3 March 4 October## # The pattern here looks like Last Sun in Mar, day after 4th Sat in Oct# # First EC Directive ???# # Summer Time Order, 1980 (SI1980/1089)# 1981    29 Mar  25 Oct fixed# 1982    28 Mar  24 Oct fixed# # Second EC Directive ???# # Summer Time Order, 1982 (SI1982/1673)# 1983    27 Mar  23 Oct fixed# 1984    25 Mar  28 Oct fixed# 1985    31 Mar  27 Oct fixed# # Third EC Directive ???# # Summer Time Order, 1986 (SI1986/223)# 1986    30 Mar  26 Oct fixed# 1987    29 Mar  25 Oct fixed# 1988    27 Mar  23 Oct fixed# # Fourth EC Directive ???# # Summer Time Order, 1988 (SI1988/931)# 1989    26 Mar  29 Oct fixed# # Fifth EC Directive ???# # Summer Time Order, 1989 (SI1989/985)# 1990    25 Mar  28 Oct fixed# 1991    31 Mar  27 Oct fixed# 1992    29 Mar  25 Oct fixed# # Sixth EC Directive# # Summer Time Order, 1992 (SI1992/1729)# 1993    28 Mar  24 Oct fixed# 1994    27 Mar  23 Oct fixed# From Peter Ilieve <peter@memex.co.uk> (June 8, 1994):# The European Union bureaucracy has edged a step closer to a 7th Directive# on summer-time arrangements.  I have the text of a Common Position# (EC No 9/94) and a statement of the Council's reasons dated 4 March 94,# reported in the Official Journal of the EC, No. C 137/38--41....# The dates again:# Year	 Start		End		End (UK & Eire, 1995 only)# (rule) (last Sun)	(last Sun)	(4th Sun)# 1995	26 March	24 September	22 October# 1996	31 March	27 October# 1997	30 March	26 October# From Peter Ilieve <peter@memex.co.uk> (March 28, 1994):# The UK/Eire end date of 22 October [1995] conflicts with your current rule of# Oct Sun>=23, and the historical UK formula of Sun after 4th Sat.# The last time 4th Sun and Sun after 4th Sat differed was in 1989,# when 29 October was used.  That year was covered by a UK Summer Time Order# for only a single year and it looks as though there was a matching 4th EC# directive for just this year.  I don't have the text of the 5th EC# directive (for 1990--92) but my guess would be it said 4th Sun.# To maintain strict historical accuracy you could start a new UK ending rule# of Oct Sun>=22 in 1990.# From Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> (November 18, 1993):## As Ilieve remarks, the date `20 April 1924' in the table of ``Summer Time: A# Consultation Document'' (Cm 722, 1989) table is a transcription error;# 20 April was an Easter Sunday.  Shanks has 13 April, the correct date.# Also, the table is not quite right for 1925 through 1938; the correct rules# (which Shanks uses) are given in the Summer Time Acts of 1922 and 1925.# Shanks and the UK Government paper disagree about the Apr 1956 transition;# since we have no other data, and since Shanks was correct in the other# points of disagreement about London, we'll believe Shanks for now.# Also, for lack of other data, we'll follow Shanks for Eire in 1940-1948.## Given Peter Ilieve's comments, the following claims by Shanks are incorrect:#     * Wales did not switch from GMT to daylight savings time until#	1921 Apr 3, when they began to conform with the rest of Great Britain.# Actually, Wales was identical after 1880.#     * Eire had two transitions on 1916 Oct 1.# It actually just had one transition.#     * Northern Ireland used single daylight savings time throughout WW II.

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