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Bletchley Park

It's 1983 and a wealthy English family’s 581-acre country estate, 50 miles north of London, comes on the market. Swiftly purchased by a housing developer with an eye on its potential, given its excellent transport links, the chance to recoup much of the cost, by selling on the 58 acres immediately surrounding the mansion, proved irresistible. Little did he, or anyone else, know that the mansion would become the hub of the most closely-kept secret operation of the following seven years, home of the Government Code & Cypher School, the code-breaking heroes and heroines of Bletchley Park.

The GC&CS was formed, soon after WW1 by a pragmatic merger of two armed forces departments, the Royal Navy’s NID25 and the Army’s MIiB, and based in Central London, therefore at risk if the anticipated second conflict were to happen. With the War Office unwilling to find the funds, the head of GC&CS, Admiral Sinclair, convinced that hostilities were inevitable, seized the initiative and purchased Bletchley Park in May 1938, confident of its suitability, being comfortably distant from the capital and on both the main north-south railway line and another line, which ran east-west, taking in the university cities of Cambridge and Oxford. In September of that year, as tensions with Germany increased, Commander Alastair Denniston moved the London-based office of GC&CS and MI6 to Bletchley, as a real-time evacuation in the face of imminent war. Today known as ‘Captain Ridley’s Shooting Party’, lessons learnt from the three-week deployment gave the Codebreakers a huge advantage come 1939, including the need to recruit more of the eclectic mix of specialist staff needed to make it work. For over 10 years, Nazi Germany had been communicating enciphered messages and Denniston needed both extremely clever, ‘professor’ types as crypto-analysts and, because of the electromechanical devices employed by the enemy, formally-trained advanced mathematicians. Naturally, linguists versed in German, Italian, Japanese and, later, Russian were of paramount importance. Above all, whether in senior or junior positions, all members of staff were obliged to maintain absolute secrecy, not simply about their own duties but even the very existence of ‘BP’. It is a true miracle that, overall up to 10,000 individuals (three-quarters of whom were female) involved, thetrue function of BP was not publicly revealed until many decades later,sadly too late for many to receive due recognition in their lifetime.Cracking the ‘Enigma’ (a generic name for a series of increasinglycomplicated cipher machines) code was a priority and was greatlyfacilitated by the pre-war work of a number of Polish code-breakers who,although never engaged at BP, provided vital information. With Enigmamachines, and others such as Lorenz, becoming ever more complex, theburden on the human mind became intolerable and led to the developmentof the ‘Bombe’, the first electromechanical calculator, designed by AlanTuring and Gordon Welchman to eliminate a high proportion of the manybillions of possible coding combinations. Subsequently, over 200‘Bombes’ were manufactured, for use around the clock, but, to decode themessages enciphered by the Lorenz, another, more powerful machine hadto be devised, brought into service in 1943. Its name, fittingly givenits size, was ‘Colossus’ and it was the world’s first semi-programmableelectronic computer. It was built by a UK Post Office team under theleadership of the brilliant, but sadly unrecognised, Tommy Flowers. Only a visit to Bletchley Park, first opened to the public in 1994 and improved in every succeeding year, can do justice to the dedication and stoicism of the people involved and their single-minded determination to contribute to the war effort in the best way they could. To join any of the free walking tours around the site is advisable, to fill in some of the gaps in knowledge, and the guides are informative and hugely entertaining. Once left to their own devices, some may simply retire for refreshments but, for me, the mansion displays make it a mustvisit and, with many of the original huts remaining in situ, furnished and decorated as they would have been, the whole park ‘sings’ of the invaluable work carried out there. You will be awed by the collection of different cipher machines and the ‘techies’ will be fascinated by the radio communication exhibits in the National Radio Centre. Annually, visitor numbers are 2-300,000 and the Park is open all year round. Bletchley Park is, at the same time, enjoyable, enlightening and inspiring, telling an emotional and little-known true story of obstinate dedication. u

B L E T C H L E Y P A R K , S H E R W O O D D R I V E , B L E T C H L E Y, M I L T O N KEYNES, MK3 6EB.

BLETCHLEYPARK.ORG.UK

On your travels. These nearby gems are well worth a visit:

WONDERFUL WADDESDON

Waddesdon Manor

Waddesdon Manor

Built in the classical French- Renaissance style for Ferdinand de Rothschild in the late-19th century, Waddesdon Manor, near Aylesbury, is a treasure-house for the family’s fabulous collections of paintings, sculpture and decorative artistry and the gardens are picturesque perfection.

waddesdon.org.uk

AMAZING ASCOTT Originally a 17th century, Jacobean halftimbered farmhouse, Ascott, near Leighton Buzzard, was remodelled and enlarged for Leopold de Rothschild. The result was described by Mary Gladstone as ‘a palace-like cottage, the loveliest thing’. Form your own opinion as the house, its art collections and blissful gardens are now in the care of The National Trust.

nationaltrust.org.uk/ascott

WILD WOBURN Close by the architectural splendour of Woburn Abbey, is the Safari Park, whose 360 acres offer unrivalled opportunities to experience wildlife in a natural environment. For the comfort and safety of both the animals and visitors, the Road Safari takes in gentler areas before reaching the 71-acre Kingdom of the Carnivores – do not leave the car! The Foot Safari, which follows, allows animal-lovers a more tactile encounter!

woburnsafari.co.uk

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