Every weekday at exactly one second past one o’clock, a cannon fires from Edinburgh Castle. The sound rolls down the Royal Mile, across Princes Street, and out over the Firth of Forth.
Visitors stop in their tracks. Locals glance at their watches and carry on. This is the One O’Clock Gun — and it has been fired without fail since 1861.

The Problem Nobody Could See Through
In the 1850s, ships anchored in the Firth of Forth faced a serious problem. To navigate accurately at sea, sailors relied on precision chronometers. To keep those instruments accurate, they needed a reliable daily time signal.
In 1852, Edinburgh gave them one. Nelson’s Monument on Calton Hill began dropping a large ball each day at precisely 1pm. Sailors would watch it fall and set their instruments accordingly.
There was just one problem: Edinburgh’s haar. The thick sea fog that rolls in from the Firth of Forth, sometimes for days at a time, swallowing landmarks whole.
A falling ball is useless in fog. Sound is not.
On 7 June 1861, Edinburgh Castle fired the One O’Clock Gun for the first time. Ships at anchor in Leith heard the blast and set their clocks. A tradition was born.
Why 1pm, Not Noon?
The obvious question. Most people expect a midday signal — so why fire at one in the afternoon?
The answer is practical. Sound travels at roughly 340 metres per second. Edinburgh Castle sits about a mile inland from the Leith docks. By the time the cannon’s report reached the water, enough time would have passed to introduce small but meaningful errors into a noon signal.
At 1pm, navigators already knew to expect the signal at that hour — matching the time the Calton Hill time ball dropped. Any variation in sound travel time could be calculated and accounted for. The precision required by Victorian navigation demanded every variable be controlled.
The gun and the time ball operated side by side for decades: one for fog, one for fair weather. Together, they kept the fleet of the Firth of Forth on time.
The Gun Itself
The current weapon is a 105mm L118 light field gun — a modern artillery piece that replaced earlier 18-pounder models over the years. It fires a quarter-kilogram blank charge.
Even a blank is enough to feel in your chest on the castle esplanade. The concussive wave rolls across the Old Town, bouncing off tenement walls, travelling outward toward Arthur’s Seat and beyond.
The gun fires Monday through Saturday. Sundays, Good Friday, and Christmas Day are the only exceptions. On those days, Edinburgh is briefly, noticeably quieter at 1pm.
If you want to experience Edinburgh’s extraordinary hidden layers, standing on the esplanade at five to one is a good place to start.
When It Stopped — and Everyone Noticed
In more than 160 years, the One O’Clock Gun has missed its scheduled firing only twice.
Both times, Edinburgh noticed immediately. Residents checked their watches. Tourists looked up from their cameras. A small but familiar piece of the city felt out of order — the way a clock going silent feels wrong even in a room you have stopped consciously listening to.
It is a strange quality for a tradition to have: to be missed before you have fully realised it is missing.
A Living Piece of Edinburgh
GPS made the gun’s original purpose obsolete long ago. No sailor docks at Leith to set a chronometer by a hilltop cannon. The Firth of Forth navigates itself now by satellite.
But Edinburgh kept firing the gun.
It is one of many things that make visiting Edinburgh feel unlike any other city — a place where the past is not sealed behind glass but woven into ordinary daily life. The same city where the man who inspired Jekyll and Hyde once walked has never stopped marking its hours out loud.
Edinburgh has always known that some traditions are worth keeping not because they remain useful, but because they are true. The One O’Clock Gun says: this city was here in 1861. It is still here now. And it intends to keep being heard.
Stand on the esplanade at five to one on any weekday. Wait for the silence just before the blast. Then feel, for a moment, the full weight of more than 160 years pressing into the afternoon air.
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