September is here (and so, too, is the new school year ). It’s getting darker outside earlier. And as the temperatures seem to cool (for now, at least), people seem to have fall and winter on the mind.
You know what that means — PennLive’s annual reminder of when daylight saving time ends this year.
According to TimeAndDate.com , daylight saving time 2025 will draw to a close on Sunday, Nov. 2, at 2 a.m. Clocks will “fall back” during this time, meaning people will get an hour’s more shuteye.
The Old Farmer’s Almanac explains that daylight saving time was first pioneered by an Englishman named William Willet, who believed it could make the best productive use of the sun’s light while saving on electricity costs. The idea eventually caught steam in World War I, and here we a