Updated
Updated · Space.com · Jul 4
July 30, 1776 Lunar Eclipse Lasted 1 Hour 35 Minutes as Revolution-Era Americans Watched
Updated
Updated · Space.com · Jul 4

July 30, 1776 Lunar Eclipse Lasted 1 Hour 35 Minutes as Revolution-Era Americans Watched

3 articles · Updated · Space.com · Jul 4

Summary

  • A total lunar eclipse on July 30, 1776 delivered an unusually long 1 hour 35 minutes of totality, with mid-eclipse at 7:01 p.m. and the moon leaving Earth’s shadow at 8:48 p.m.
  • Philadelphia, New York and Boston missed much of the peak because totality occurred before moonrise; observers first saw the moon re-emerge at 7:49 p.m. low in the east-southeast.
  • The eclipse came 26 days after the Declaration of Independence was adopted and 3 days before delegates began signing the parchment on Aug. 2, helping embed the event in Revolutionary-era lore.
  • Journals and diaries show the eclipse was widely discussed, with figures including John Newton and militia officers often treating it as an omen during a period of wartime uncertainty.
  • The broader 1776 sky looked largely familiar by modern standards, though Polaris sat 1.88 degrees from the celestial pole versus 0.63 degrees today and Philadelphia reached a mild 76 F on July 4.

Insights

From 1776's mild weather to 2026's heatwaves, how is climate change reshaping our most cherished national traditions?
The founders looked to the sky for guidance. What have we lost by trading starlight for streetlights?
As city lights erase the stars, what unseen health and environmental crises are we only now beginning to discover?