The US national volt was maintained by standard cells
(batteries) for many years. English engineer Josiah Latimer Clark
invented the Clark cell in 1873. It
is a wet chemical cell that produces a highly stable EMF (voltage) suitable for
use as a voltage standard (shown below).

The Clark cell produced a voltage of 1.4328V at 15º C (288 kelvin). It had a rather large
temperature coefficient (TC) of -1.15 mV/ºC.
The Clark cell was legalized as the standard of EMF in the US in 1894
and in several other countries about that time. During the years 1893 to 1905
the cell devised by Edward Weston was found to have many advantages over it,
and was officially adopted in 1908 at the London International Conference of
Electrical Units and Standards according to NBS monograph 84.
Some more early history of standard cells and information can be found here. The Weston (or cadmium
sulfide) cell is shown below.

It has an emf TC about 1/30th of the Clark cell,
better emf stability, and an emf closer to 1V. The voltage depends on the
concentration and acidity of the solution, the composition of the amalgam, the
crystal phases of cadmium sulfate and the temperature and pressure. New
unsaturated Weston cells generally range in emf from 1.0190 to 1.0194 V and on
the average reach 1.0183 V within 23 to 37 years, providing they are maintained
at about 25ºC and not subjected to abuse. When they reach 1.0183 V they
generally behave erratically.[1]
Standard cells at the National Bureau of Standards (now called
the National Institute of Standards and Technology)(NIST) were kept in oil
baths to maintain constant temperature, thereby reducing the problem of
temperature variations to a negligible amount. They kept the temperature
variation of the cells to less than 0.002ºC per day. Primary standards labs had
their cells in a temperature controlled air bath enclosure in groups of 4 or 6.
It was wise to have two baths, one kept at the lab to use while the other was
sent for calibration to NIST. For best results, an inter-comparison was done
before the cells left, and after they came back. This gave evidence for changes
during shipping.
Originally the comparison was done in the lab where I worked
with a Guildline
9930 Direct Current Comparator Potentiometer. It had an optical readout galvanometer. It was
essentially a dc transformer. It used magnetic field canceling by changing
current somewhere (possibly the galvo itself). A standard cell that was picked
to use as the standard was connected to one side, and a set of dials was
adjusted to its voltage. The cell under test was connected to some other
terminals, and another set of dials was adjusted until the galvo came to a
null. The unknown's voltage was read from the second set of dials. This may be
oversimplified (I'm pushing my memory). This process was repeated until
sufficient comparisons were made.
Later a standard
cell scanner was used to compare the cells (in conjunction with a digital
voltmeter). Comparisons were done in
accordance with a statistically
derived experiment.. Some of our cells had some small radioactivity. A
cells voltage would suddenly increase 1 to 2 ppm for a second or two, then
return to its previous value. I assume it was when an atom emitted a particle.
That complicated the comparison process. Our lab was able to maintain the dc
volt to an uncertainty of 1-2 parts per million (ppm) with standard cells.
Although I haven't seen one in about 20 years, they are
still sold on ebay. It's been over 100 years since they were adopted. I doubt
that any serious calibration lab is still using them. Zener references have
made them obsolete. Zener references may be the subject of my next thread.
-S
[1] Precision Measurement and Calibration Electricity - Low Frequency (NBS Special
Publication 300 - Volume 3 Dec. 1968)