The accurate calculation of a location's
longitude was long a critical element of maritime navigation. After abortive previous attempts, the
United States Coast Survey began work in the 1830s to produce a consistent set of
nautical charts for the nation's coastline. The
Harvard College Observatory in
Cambridge, Massachusetts was chosen in 1847 as the site of the prime reference point for the longitude determinations, and survey work extended from there. The advent of
telegraphy made possible the simultaneous exchange of time signals between distant locations to determine the difference in time between observed passage of an object in the sky (often
Polaris) at different locations. With sufficiently accurate time pieces, longitude could be determined with significant precision. On August 31, 1857, a survey crew installed equipment at this site, and at Thomas Hill in
Bangor, Maine, and its longitude was established with respect to Cambridge, and to facilitate the determination of longitude at the observatory in
Fredericton, New Brunswick. With the advent of transatlantic communications cables (first laid in 1858), the idea of coordinating the longitude with respect to the
Greenwich Meridian became feasible. Although the first cable failed soon after operation, a second cable was laid 1866, connecting Foilhommerum on
Valentia Island in
Ireland with
Heart's Content, Newfoundland. The longitudes of the Irish and Newfoundland stations were determined with respect to Greenwich in the summer of 1866, and in December of that year, observations were conducted at Calais to determine its longitude with respect to Greenwich. This allowed the entire United States longitudinal framework to be coordinated with that of Great Britain. The observatory was used once more, in 1895, to determine with greater precision its longitude with respect to Cambridge. In 1998 the transit stone was found to have been pushed over and set against a nearby tree. The city returned it to its original 1857 location, and a surveyor with the
National Geodetic Survey (one of the successors to the U.S. Coast Survey) in 2004 confirmed the stone's location to be within of its 1866 observed location. ==See also==