Curious: Britain sent a set of standards to the Netherlands in 1856 too. All
European countries got a set. The Dutch ones have vanished, however. The
other European ones must have vanished too, or ended up in museums or in
collections.

Han

----- Original Message -----
From: "Joseph B. Reid" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2001 3:37 AM
Subject: [USMA:14669] RE: Imperial Knowledge.


 Han Maenen wrote in USMA 14649:

<snip>

......As far as I known, before 1893  the US had its own yard and pound
standard and never used an authentic British Imperial Standard Yard and
Pound.

In 1814 an 82 inch bronze bar with an inlaid silver scale was procured from
Troughton of London.  This bar was a copy of Troughton's and not been
compared with the standard British yard.  From 1832 until 1856 this bar
served as the unofficial standard of length for the USA.

 A Troy pound was sent to the USA in 1827 by Albert Gallatin, Minister of
the USA in London, and delivered to the Mint at Philadelphia.  An Act
 passed by the House on 1828 May 19 established this pound as the standard
for the Mint.  This was the only law of the USA officially adopting a
standard of the customary system of weights and measures.

 The USA obtained new copies of the British standards in 1856.

 Information obtained from U.S. Metric Study Interim Report NBS SP 345-10 of
1971.

 Joseph B. Reid
17 Glebe Road West
Toronto    M5P 1C8       Tel. 416 486-6071


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