The following is a set of important dates and their associated documents in the history of the modern metric system.
- 1585
- In his book The Tenth Simon Stevin suggests that a decimal system should be used for weights and measures, coinage, and divisions of the degree of arc.
- 1620
- Introduction of Gunter’s chain, a device for use by surveyors in England to measure distance. The chain was one tenth of a furlong and consisted of 100 links. This decimal format enabled the use of trigonometry for measuring land areas.
- 1668
- John Wilkins, an English clergyman, proposed a comprehensive system of units in which the unit of length was a “one-second pendulum” and the unit mass was defined as the mass of water contained in a cube with side equal to the unit of length.
- 1670
- Gabriel Mouton, a French clergyman, proposed a system of measurement of length based on one degree of arc of the earth’s circumference. He also proposed a systematic naming system for his units, a concept that was used when the prefixes “centi-“, “milli-“, “kilo-” etc. were developed.
- 1790
- Thomas Jefferson proposed a decimal-based measurement system for the United States.
- France’s Louis XVI authorized scientific investigations aimed at a reform of French weights and measures. These investigations led to the development of the first “metric” system.
- 1791
- French surveyors Delambre and Méchain commence their seven-year project to measure the exact distance from Dunkirk to Barcelona. This distance was used as the basis of the definition of the metre.
- 1792
- The US Mint was formed to produce the world’s first decimal currency (the US dollar consisting of 100 cents).
- 1795
- France officially adopted the metric system.
- 1812
- Napoleon temporarily suspended the compulsory provisions of the 1795 metric system adoption.
- 1840
- The metric system reinstated as the compulsory system in France.
- 1866
- The use of the metric system made legal in the United States by the Metric Act of 1866 (Public Law 39-183). This law made it unlawful to refuse to trade or deal in metric quantities.
- 1875
- The Convention of the Metre signed on in Paris by 17 nations, including the United States. The Metre Convention, often called the Treaty of the Metre in the United States, provided for improved metric weights and measures and the establishment of the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) devoted to international agreement on matters of weights and measures. To recognize this anniversary, 20 May is now World Metrology Day, as found on the Metric events and anniversaries page.
- 1889
- As a result of the Metre Convention, the US received a prototype metre and kilogram to be used as measurement standards.
- 1893
- These metric prototypes were declared “fundamental standards of length and mass” in the Mendenhall Order. Since that date, the yard, pound, etc. have been officially defined in terms of the metric system.
- 1916
- The Metric Association formed as a non-profit organization advocating adoption of the metric system in US commerce and education. The organizational name started as the American Metric Association and was changed to the US Metric Association (USMA) in 1974.
- 1920
- The Metric Association published its first metric style guide. [Its current edition is now available as Guide to the Use of the Metric System (SI).]
- 1954
- The International System of Units began its development at the 10th CGPM. Six of the new metric base units were adopted.
- 1958
- A conference of English-speaking nations agreed to unify their standards of length and mass, and define them in terms of metric measures. The American yard was shortened and the imperial yard was lengthened as a result. The new conversion factors were announced in the Federal Register (v. 24(128), 1959-Jul-01, p. 5348-5349).
- 1960
- The General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) adopts the name Système international d’unités, with the international abbreviation SI, for the metric system and lays down rules for prefixes, derived units, and other matters, specifying six base units (metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, candela).
- The metre is redefined in terms of a wavelength of light emitted by krypton atoms, replacing the 1889 prototype bar of platinum-iridium (see the history of definitions of the metre).
- 1964
- The National Bureau of Standards (NBS) made the metric system its standard “except when the use of these units would obviously impair communication or reduce the usefulness of a report.”
- 1968
- Public Law 90-472 authorized a 3-year US Metric Study, to determine the impact of increasing metric use on the US. This study was carried out by the National Bureau of Standards (NBS).
- 1971
- The US Metric Study resulted in a Report to the Congress: A Metric America, A Decision Whose Time Has Come. The 13-volume report concluded that the US should, indeed, “go metric” deliberately and carefully through a coordinated national program, and establish a target date 10 years ahead, by which time the US would be predominately metric.
- The mole becomes SI’s seventh base unit.
- 1973
- The UCLA/USMA/LACES/STC and other professional groups National Metric Conference, the largest ever held, totaling 1700 registrants, took place at the University of California, Los Angeles in September. It took place as a result of USMA’s recommendation. USMA coordinated and directed the event. One of the speakers was the US Secretary of Commerce.
- The American National Metric Council (ANMC) formed as a not-for-profit, non-advocative trade organization to plan and coordinate SI implementation by US industry.
- 1974
- The Education Amendments of 1974 (Public Law 92-380) encouraged educational agencies and institutions to prepare students to use the metric system of measurement as part of the regular educational program.
- The initials “US” were added to the Metric Association name by the Board of Directors. The organization is now known as the “US Metric Association, Inc.” with the initialism “USMA”.
- 1975
- The Metric Conversion Act of 1975 (Public Law 94-168) passed by Congress. The Metric Act established the US Metric Board to coordinate and plan the increasing use and voluntary conversion to the metric system. However, the Metric Act was devoid of any target dates for metric conversion.
- 1976
- The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) started the National Metric Week tradition, with the first one during the week of , the year after the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 was enacted.
- 1979
- The Treasury Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) requires wine producers and importers to switch to metric bottles in seven standard [litre and millilitre] sizes.
- 1980
- The Treasury Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) requires distilled spirits (hard liquor) bottles to conform to the volume of one of six standard metric [litre and millilitre] sizes.
- 1982
- President Ronald Reagan disbanded the US Metric Board and canceled its funding. Responsibility for metric coordination was transferred to the Office of Metric Programs in the Department of Commerce.
- 1988
- The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (Public Law 100-418) amended and strengthened the Metric Conversion Act of 1975, designating the metric system as the preferred measurement system, and requiring each federal agency to be metric by the end of fiscal year 1992.
- 1991
- President George H. W. Bush signed Executive Order 12770, Metric Usage in Federal Government Programs directing all executive departments and federal agencies implement the use of the metric system. The Executive Order is also available as an appendix to: Interpretation of the SI for the United States and Federal Government Metric Conversion Policy
- 1994
- The Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (FPLA) was amended to add a requirement for metric units on most consumer products.
- All four Canadian Stock Exchanges began decimal trading, the first exchanges in North American to abandon the old “pieces-of-eight” trading system and welcome the new decimal system. The old tradition of trading stocks in increments of one-eighth of a dollar, or 12.5 cents, dates back to when the Spanish mille dollar was divided into “pieces of eight”.
- July 1996
- All surface temperature observations in National Weather Service METAR/TAF reports are now transmitted in degrees Celsius.
- Now suspended, the deadline for metricating highway construction, including all agreements, contracts, and plans processed by individual states for federally-funded highway construction to be in metric units, was canceled by Congressional action, leaving metric conversion as voluntary but still recommended to comply with the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988.
- US Stock Exchanges finalized the change to decimal trading. The Securities and Exchange Commission has ordered that all stocks must be quoted in dollars and cents rather than fractions by this date. The switch to decimal trading brought the US in line with the rest of the world’s major exchanges. This follows the change of the Canadian Stock Exchanges to decimal trading in 1996.
- UK Metric Association (UKMA) issued a comprehensive report, A Very British Mess, on the need to complete UK metrication.
- Speed limits in Ireland were converted from miles per hour to kilometres per hour (km/h). To accompany this, new cars have kilometres as the primary speed displayed on their speedometers. Wind speeds in weather reports were also changed to kilometres per hour. See the Irish Department of Transport announcement.
- “Metric Moon” press release: NASA has decided to use metric units for all operations on the lunar surface when it returns to the Moon. See the NASA announcement. NASA’s Constellation Program is to be metric, according to a Program Management Directive issued on , with the metric system as the
primary system of measure
for the Constellation Program, Projects, Systems, and Mission. - 2009
- A proposal made by the EU Commission in 2006 to ban the use of non-metric units and the use of supplementary units on packaging in Europe from 1 January 2010 (apart from certain specified exceptions) was shelved with the hope that the US would allow metric-only packaging by amending the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (FPLA).
- 2019
- Major changes to the SI were agreed by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in November 2018. Effective from 20 May 2019, the definitions of four of the SI base units—the kilogram, the ampere, the kelvin, and the mole—were changed. Their new definitions were based on fixed numerical values of the Planck constant (h), the elementary charge (e), the Boltzmann constant (k), and the Avogadro constant (NA), respectively. The definitions of all seven (7) base units of the SI were uniformly expressed using the explicit formulation based on the seven (7) defining constants. Specific mises en pratique were published to explain the realization of the definitions of each of the base units.
- 2022
- The General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) adopted four new SI prefixes in November 2022, expanded from twenty (20) to twenty-four (24) with the addition of ronna, ronto, quetta, and quecto.
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