Image for The secrets of station X: how the Bletchley Park codebreakers helped win the war

The secrets of station X: how the Bletchley Park codebreakers helped win the war

See all formats and editions

A melting pot of Oxbridge dons, maverick oddballs and more regular citizens worked night and day at Station X, as Bletchley Park was known, to derive intelligence information from German coded messages.

Bear in mind that an Enigma machine had a possible 159 million million million different settings and the magnitude of the challenge becomes apparent.

That they succeeded, despite military scepticism, supplying information that led to the sinking of the Bismarck, Montgomery's victory in North Africa and the D-Day landings, is testament to an indomitable spirit that wrenched British intelligence into the modern age, as the Second World War segued into the Cold War.

Michael Smith constructs his absorbing narrative around the reminiscences of those who worked and played at Bletchley Park, and their stories add a very human colour to their cerebral activity.

The code breakers of Station X did not win the war but they undoubtedly shortened it, and the lives saved on both sides stand as their greatest achievement.

Read More
Available
£4.16
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Biteback Publishing
1849542627 / 9781849542623
eBook (EPUB)
31/10/2011
England
English
269 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Description based on print version record.