GDG- Ok... I will start one. How do we figure out timing?
Jim Lamason
jlamason at worldnet.att.net
Sat May 5 14:02:01 CDT 2007
Jim,
I am not sure if it was me or not (An over 55 moment!:-) )
But it can be one of the most frustrating things as we continue to figure
out the flow of Gettysburg.
The varying times in reports leaves me some times scratching my head..
Thanks for the reply. And I just learned something!
Jim Lamason
-----Original Message-----
From: gettysburg-bounces at arthes.com [mailto:gettysburg-bounces at arthes.com]
On Behalf Of Jim Ferguson
Sent: Saturday, May 05, 2007 2:26 PM
To: 'GDG'
Subject: RE: GDG- Ok... I will start one. How do we figure out timing?
Esteemed GDG Member Contributes:
Jim, you or someone else brought this up once before I believe. My
recollection is that the comments concentrated on how hard it would have
been to coordinate activities for many reasons.
I decided to do a little research then about the quality of timepieces of
that period and came away with the feeling that synchronizing at least
pocket watches would have been relatively easy and accurate over few day
periods. There were many French, British and Swiss watch companies that
produced watches that could take a beating, maintain good accuracy and keep
on ticking. (Timex was made in Connecticut starting in the mid 1850's)
Waltham watches were produced in America starting around 1850 (I think I
worked in one of the original factories when I was in high school) and they
were known then and still are for making a quality piece. Interestingly
also, somebody must have been buying them because they were producing in the
tens of thousands by the beginning of the civil war.
So, is it a case of none of the officers having pocket watches? Or none of
the officers thinking about synchronized watches and coordinated activities?
Or perhaps no documented, that we know of, time based coordinated movements.
Sure, in the heat of battle, it's hard to imagine someone stopping what he's
doing, taking out his pocket watch and then giving a new order. But why not
once or twice a day under other circumstances.
So my conjecture would be that yes, it was probably done under some
circumstances.
Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: gettysburg-bounces at arthes.com [mailto:gettysburg-bounces at arthes.com]
On Behalf Of Jim Lamason
Sent: Saturday, May 05, 2007 12:33 PM
To: 'GDG'
Subject: GDG- Ok... I will start one. How do we figure out timing?
Esteemed GDG Member Contributes:
Hi all,
I have been more then a lurker, but here goes...........
As I continue to research the New Jersey troops at Gettysburg, I keep
stumbling across timing.
By that I mean, we all know that the keeping of time back then was at best
inaccurate. No body thought to coordinate watches, or used the suns position
in the sky to figure out the time of day..
Has any one in this great knowledge base figured out a way to coordinate the
timing of events?
Jim Lamason
The Flag, the Flag, Oh the Flag! G.K. Warren on his death bed, 1882.
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