Marking Noon: The Time Balls and Time Flaps of the Netherlands
Richard de Grijs (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia)

TL;DR
The paper explores the historical adoption and technological evolution of time signals in the Netherlands, highlighting their scientific, civic, and imperial significance from the 19th century to the advent of wireless communication.
Contribution
It documents the Dutch development of time signals, including innovations like rotating flaps, and analyzes their social and institutional impact in maritime and civic contexts.
Findings
Dutch time signals were widely adopted in naval and commercial ports.
Innovations like rotating flaps improved signal reliability.
Time signals symbolized Dutch scientific progress and imperial identity.
Abstract
In the nineteenth century, the Netherlands quickly adopted the time ball -- a British innovation for maritime chronometer calibration -- in its main naval ports (Nieuwediep/Den Helder, Vlissingen, Hellevoetsluis) and commercial centres (Amsterdam, Rotterdam). A large sphere dropped from a mast at a fixed time, the device enabled ships to verify their chronometers against a standard, essential for accurate longitude determination and safe navigation. Its ready acceptance was eased by indigenous Dutch traditions. Rural communities had long used visual time signals like the sjouw on Terschelling island, a wicker ball raised on a mast to mark the lunch hour and milking time for farmers, and the lawei, a basket or sack used in the peat bogs of Friesland to regulate labourers' hours. The Dutch time-signal system was distinguished by its strong institutional backing from the country's Royal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Historical Astronomy and Related Studies · History of Science and Medicine
