Want to learn more about the codebreakers during World War II? Bletchley Park is the place to go. Read our guide to visiting Bletchley Park
From cracking the Enigma code to helping the Royal Navy, the 9,000 women of Bletchley Park changed the course of World War II.
Christopher Grey explains why Alan Turing was not the only star of Britain's Second World War secret data gathering centre...
The Bletchley Park Wrens, who broke German codes during WWII, have finally begun to speak on their experiences.
From cracking the Enigma code to helping the Royal Navy, the 9,000 women of Bletchley Park changed the course of World War II.
Inspire 2015 speaker Kerry Howard spoke to Claire O'Connell about the women codebreakers of Bletchley Park, her new book and the need to 'futureproof' our records today.
Turing played a key role in breaking the German Enigma code during the Second World War while working at Bletchley Park.
'Men Were The Bosses In Those Days'.. But 80% Of Britain's WWII Codebreakers Were Female
Road Trip 2011: Many say World War II would have lasted two more years if master British code breakers, led by Alan Turing, and using information and devices from Polish mathematicians, hadn't solved the Germans' secret cyphers.
David Martin, 74, (pictured) found the stricken bird when he opened the disused fire place while renovating his Surrey home.
More than 80 veterans, now well into their 90s, gathered in Buckinghamshire. The German Enigma code was famously cracked in Bletchley Park by Alan Turing and his team.
Hopefully, everyone knows about Bletchley Park the Home of the Code Breakers of WWII. If not then you must visit Bletchley and the National Museum of Computing
Elizabeth 'Betty' Balfour, 88, joined the Wrens when she was 17 - she has now revealed she and her co-workers used to dry their bras and pants on Hitler's Enigma machine during chilly, damp nights.
Road Trip 2011: Many say World War II would have lasted two more years if master British code breakers, led by Alan Turing, and using information and devices from Polish mathematicians, hadn't solved the Germans' secret cyphers.
Bletchley Park's codebreakers were actively encouraged to fall in love with each other because authorities thought it would help the war effort, a historian has revealed.
I went to one of my favourite places to play with my new Nikon D3100, Bletchley Park – home of the code breakers. Well, cypher breakers technically. I’ve been a tour guide at BP since A…
Kate Middleton, 37, paid tribute to her grandmother Valerie Glassborow with a special 'Codebreakers poppy' today while attending the wreath-laying service on Remembrance Sunday.
An extremely rare collection of papers belonging to the U.K. war-time codebreaker Alan Turing has been secured by the British state.
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Staff at "Station X" threw their teacups into lakes and stuffed them into hedges.
Once a closely guarded secret, the home of the World War II codebreakers is trying to name every person who worked there.
The photo, which has never before been seen, has been kept hidden in a bureau for seven decades by Joanna Chorley, of Buckinghamshire.
'Bletchley Park's Secret Room' is Major Neil Webster's posthumous account of the secret code-breaking process in Bletchley Park's Fusion Room during the Second World War.
Mike Woodger, Alan Turing's former assistant, and Captain Jerry Roberts, who was a code-breaker at Bletchley Park, discuss their memories of the computing pioneer.
Operation Fortitude was an elaborate, mind-boggling hoax – using decoys to fool the Germans about where we secretly planned to land on D-Day.
Max Newman is the man credited as being Alan Turing's mentor at Bletchley and later at Manchester University. Newman's son William recalls a childhood where he got to play and beat Turing at Monopoly
The Conservative life peer made the gesture - reminiscent of Churchill's famed V for Victory' sign - when her relatively junior colleague Lord King of Bridgwater gestured towards her to illustrate his point about the extreme age of World War II veterans.
I had the day off today, so I decided to pay another visit to Bletchely Park (my last visit was in September 2009). Some very smart people worked at Bletchely Park (codename Station X) including some of my heros whom most people have never heard of: Alan Turing, Tommy Flowers and Max Newman. "Ultra" was the designation adopted by British military intelligence in June 1941 for wartime signals intelligence obtained by "breaking" high-level encrypted enemy radio and teleprinter communications at the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park. "Ultra" eventually became the standard designation among the western Allies for all such intelligence. The statue was created by Stephen Kettle and tooks 18 months to complete and weighs 1.5 tonnes. I think it is made entirely from Welsh slate.
As a new ITV drama, The Bletchley Circle, imagines them as post-war sleuths, Iain Hollingshead learns the truth.