Introduction - the influence of Ultra in World War II, F.H. Hinsley. Part 1 The production of Ultra intelligence: life in and out of Hut 3, William Millward; the duty officer Hut 3, Ralph Bennett; a naval officer in Hut 3, Edward Thomas; the Z watch in Hut 4 part I, Alec Dakin; the Z watch in Hut 4 part II, Walter Eytan; Italian naval decrypts, Patrick Wilkinson; Naval Section VI, Vivienne Alford; Anglo-American signals intelligence co-operation, Telford Taylor; an American at Bletchley, Robert M. Slusser; Bletchley Park, the Admiralty and naval Enigma, F.H. Hinsley. Part 2 Enigma: the Enigma machine - its mechanism and use, Alan Stripp; Hut 6 - early days, Stuart Milner-Barry; Hut 6 - 1941-1945, Derek Taunt; Hut 8 and naval Enigma part I, Joan Murray; Hut 8 and naval Enigma part II, Rolf Noskwith; the Abwehr Enigma, Peter Twinn; the bombes, Diana Payne; Part 3 Fish: an introduction to Fish, F.H. Hinsley; Enigma and Fish, Jack Good; the Tunny machine, Ken Halton; Operation Tunny, Gil Hayward. Part 4 Field ciphers and tactical codes: recollections of Bletchley Park, France and Cairo, Henry Dryden; army Ultra's poor relations, Noel Currer-Briggs; navy Ultra's poor relations, Christopher Morris; tactical signals of the German air force, Peter Gray Lucas. Part 5 Japanese codes: Japanese naval codes, Michael Loewe; Bedford - Bletchley - Kilindini - Colombo, Hugh Denham; Japanese military codes, Maurice Wiles; Japanese army air force codes at Bletchley Park and Delhi, Alan Stripp; recollections of "temps perdu" at Bletchley Park, Carmen Blacker. Appendix: how the Bletchley Park buildings took shape, Bob Watson.
A top secret Second World War story told from the inside for the first time
F.H. Hinsley was formerly Master of St John's
College and Professor of the History of International Relations at
the University of Cambridge. He is the author of the four-volume
history British Intelligence in the Second World War.
Alan Stripp is Director of Cambridge University
Summer Schools on British Secret Services.
`this splendid book, which is divided into four sections, tells of
one of the most amazing feats in cryptologic history ... This is a
remarkable book, undoubtedly the definitive work on Bletchley Park,
with livley anecdotes and detailed stories giving a colourful
account of BP's daily life and work, which made a major
contribution to shortening the war, as Hinsley demonstrates in an
astute analysis.'
Cryptologia, January 1994
`Together, the editors and their wartime colleagues have made a
real contribution to the history of the Second World War.'
The Naval Review
`it makes fascinating reading.'
Bulletin of the Early Historical Society, Nov 1993
`The value of this book is that it is the first - and probably the
last given that nobody who worked at Bletchley is now under 65 -
authentic account written by the men and women who broke the coded
signals of Germany, Italy and Japan between 1939 and 1945. ...
fascinating book ... A remarkable story, excellently
illustrated.'
Legion, Nov/Dec 1993
`The editors of Code-Breakers were both distinguished
cryptographers and their contributions are outstanding.'
The Tablet, 6 November 1993
`a wonderful picture of what life was like at Bletchley Park in
those heady days'
World War II Review
`what it offers is the human side of an operation more secret than
and just a critical to Allied victory as anything in the war except
the Manhattan Project. For the most part, the men and women
involved herin tell their stories with simple eloquence'
Booklist
`a highly revealing, even exciting book, written with inside
knowledge, that lays fascinating former secrets bare ... It is a
delight to have so crucial a subject so clearly and so
entertainingly described, by some thirty people who really
understand what they are discussing, and can set the record quite
straight.'
The Times
`This immensely enjoyable and readable book therefore represents a
real service to history ... engrossing, important and scrupulously
edited.'
Robert Harris, Sunday Times
`Anyone interested in the Second World War will sit up all night,
and chess players and puzzle-solvers will be captivated by later
chapters.'
Noël Annan, Independent on Sunday
`fascinating volume ... instructive and entertaining.'
Christopher Andrew, Sunday Telegraph
`In Codebreakers, the whole fascinating story is told in
detail.'
Cambridge Evening News
`This extraordinary story encapsulates the enduring fascination of
Bletchley Park ... This immensely enjoyable and readable book ...
represents a real service to history ... it comes not a moment too
soon, for most of its contributors have never spoken publicly
before and are now well into their seventies. Their testimony has
been recorded just in time. Blethcley Park must be preserved and
this engrossing, important and scrupulously edited book reminds
us
why.'
Robert Harris, Sunday Times
`fascinating reminiscences'
John Keegan, Daily Telegraph
`fascinating insiders' account of wartime code-cracking ... an
absorbing read'
Niall Ferguson, Daily Mail
`Anyone interested in the Second World War will sit up all night,
and chess players and puzzle-solvers will be captivated by later
chapters.'
Noël Annan, Independent on Sunday
`This immensely enjoyable and readable book ... represents a real
service to history ... Bletchley Park must be preserved, and this
engrossing, important and scrupulously edited book reminds us
why.'
Sunday Times
'it is an exciting story they have to tell'
Tom Greenwell, Yorkshire Post
'This volume of personal recollections by some 30 of the survivors
is ... especially welcome. Conditions of life and work at
Bletchley, and its principal achievements, are faithfully sampled
in Codebreakers, which is worth reading both for its historical
interest and for the sidelights it throws on the problems
encountered in the rapid assembly and organization of one of the
greatest collections of talent that has ever occurred in
Western
civilization.'
R.V. Jones, Nature, Vol. 366, December 1993
'This unique volume will be of great interest to cryptologists in
particular, and intelligence buffs in general.'
Surveillant 3.2 & 3.3
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