Friday, June 15, 2018
Greenwich
On Friday, June 15, the EIL students along with Profs. Berry and
Parsons took a Thames Clipper boat up the Thames River
to Greenwich. At Greenwich, they visited the Cutty Sark ship, Royal
Maritime Museum, the Queen's House, and the Royal Observatory. In the Time and Longitude Gallery of the Flamsteed House at the Royal Observatory, students were able to see Harrison's sea clocks from the eighteenth century. Harrison's H4 clock is considered the most important
timekeeper ever made. It is the machine that helped solve the problem of
keeping accurate time at sea and finally won Harrison huge rewards from
the Board of Longitude and the British Government. As is
customary, group photos were taken at the Prime Meridian (Latitude 0)
and with Southeast London as the background. Many of the students were wearing their EIL program
T-shirts.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Thanks for sharing these photos and info!
ReplyDelete