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Vertical sundial being installed at downtown Wooster market

Not much to look at just yet, the vertical sundial installation will take place over the course of several months. The faint shadow cast from the gnomon, the structural device that actually casts the shadow is seen here between moments of cloud cover.

Kyle Valentini

Leave it to the progressive and creative members of Local Roots Market and Café and Wayne County Sustainable Energy Network to come up with a project that is both an educational tool and a way to beautify what was once a lackluster brick wall in downtown Wooster.

Keith Speirs serves on the board of directors for both organizations and came up with the idea of installing a sundial after spending time with Clyde Simpson, observatory coordinator at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

Unlike the sundials most of us have seen, Speirs’ differs in that it is a vertical sundial, which is placed on a wall and is vertical to the ground. There are two types of vertical dials; the direct vertical and the declining vertical. The direct vertical dials are upon surfaces that face a cardinal direction, which is to say they face true north, south, east or west. The declining vertical dial does not face a true compass point.

Speirs’ sundial is a direct vertical dial and will be placed on the south facing wall of the two-story Local Roots Market and Café building at 140 S. Walnut St. in Wooster.

A sundial is a simple, yet accurate, instrument, which tells time by the movement of the shadow a pointer casts upon a dial, which marks the hours of the day. The shadow moves as the sun changes position in the sky throughout the day, and the dial tracks this movement.

For a sundial to be accurate, the pointer must be slanted at an angle equal to the latitude of its location. Vertical pointers are useful at showing the correct time of day at one latitude and only during one season.

The creation of the sundial is an ongoing process and won’t be complete until December. Speirs began making the hourly points June 21, the summer solstice. Hour lines on the dial plate indicate the shadow position at a particular hour. The shadow is created from the gnomon, the physical structure that actually casts the shadow.

The gnomon and hour lines are constructed of aluminum and are being custom manufactured by Morrison Custom Welding. “Morrison thought it was a really neat project to get involved with,” said Speirs. “They were anxious to help and even hoped it was more complex than what it turned out to be.”

Prior to the institution of standard time in 1883, most cities and towns used some form of solar time maintained on a common clock within the town. The U.S. and Canadian railroad industry was responsible for creating a standard time but it was not immediately embraced.

The sundial will take up the upper half of the two-story wall while the lower half will be installed with a roof that will hold solar panels. More of an educational tool than a means of powering the market at this point, Speirs wants the panels to provoke conversation and get people to start talking about alternative energy.

Beneath the solar paneled roof will be Wooster’s first electric car charging station. “We will leave this area for electric car parking and while they shop they can plug in,” said Spears. “Eventually we’d like to add a parking area for our Amish customers to park their horse-drawn vehicles.”

Speirs pointed out the interesting juxtaposition of having an ancient time telling device and a modern electricity generating device placed together on one wall. “This wall was rather an eyesore and we wanted to do something to make it look better and create an educational tool at the same time,” said Speirs.

Speirs would like to eventually have a plaque placed near the sundial to explain the instrument more clearly for those with an interest. “Sundials are a lot more complicated than I realized before I got involved with this project,” said Speirs. “My interest in astronomy and map making was helpful and I am pretty certain it is as accurate as can be.”

Published: June 30, 2011
New Article ID: 2011706309970