The Prime Meridian
During our travels in the United Kingdom with our girls, we visited Greenwich, just outside London. I wanted to see the famous Royal Observatory, but I also wanted the experience of standing on the Prime Meridian. There, with one foot in the Eastern Hemisphere and the other in the Western Hemisphere, I found myself straddling one of the most important reference lines on Earth.

The Royal Observatory was established in 1675 by King Charles II to improve navigation at sea, an issue of great importance to Britain’s growing maritime empire. Astronomers working here spent centuries studying the heavens and developing methods to determine longitude. In 1884, representatives from twenty-five nations met in Washington, D.C., and agreed to adopt the Greenwich meridian as the world’s standard for measuring longitude and time, giving rise to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
Standing on that famous line, I was reminded that something as simple as a line drawn by human agreement could connect the entire world. Every map, every time zone, and every GPS coordinate trace its origins back to this spot. Sharing the experience with our girls made the visit even more memorable and added another chapter to our family’s travels together.
Looking back, it is remarkable to think that generations of sailors, explorers, and scientists depended on the work done at Greenwich to navigate the globe. What appears to be a simple line in the ground represents centuries of discovery and international cooperation. Today, millions of visitors come here each year, making the Prime Meridian one of the few places on Earth where you can literally stand between east and west.
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