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Photo Tour of Bletchley Park

Tour the home of modern cryptology and the birthplace of the electronic computer.

Geoffrey Morrison
Geoffrey Morrison is a writer/photographer about tech and travel for CNET, The New York Times, and other web and print publications. He's also the Editor-at-Large for The Wirecutter. He has written for Sound&Vision magazine, Home Theater magazine, and was the Editor-in-Chief of Home Entertainment magazine. He is NIST and ISF trained, and has a degree in Television/Radio from Ithaca College. His bestselling novel, Undersea, and its sequel, Undersea Atrophia, are available in paperback and digitally on Amazon. He spends most of the year as a digital nomad, living and working while traveling around the world. You can follow his travels at BaldNomad.com and on his YouTube channel.
Geoffrey Morrison
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Bletchley Park

The Mansion at Bletchley Park. Though this is the most photogenic building (and oft-used when Bletchley Park is discussed), not much actual code-breaking work went on there.

Also, the weather was rainy and miserable when I was there, giving a far more accurate representation of what it's normally like than the sunny pictures you'll see elsewhere on the Web (it is Britain, after all).

A Tour of Bletchley Park: Codebreaking that helped win WWII, and the birthplace of the modern computer

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The Enigma

As soon as you enter the grounds (and pay your £15 entrance fee), you're thrown right into it. Here you can see the infamous Enigma cipher machine.

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Enigma close-up

It's a box of many, many wires and gears. While seemingly low-tech these days, it was remarkably cutting edge for its day.

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Enigma Rotor

This is one of the rotors from an Enigma, with its inner wires exposed.

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The grounds

One you're out of the ticket building (which, next to the main entrance, is actually a little bit away from the Mansion), you begin a cleverly-designed guided tour. You're given a heavily-protected iPod touch, which has a video explanation for each area, plus additional videos, interviews, and photos which add to the experience. It worked really well.

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The lake

Though a high-pressure environment, everyone at Bletchley during WWII was encouraged to relax as much as possible. Boating in the summer, ice skating in the winter, and so on.

I am unaware if these are special cipher ducks.

Cipherducks should be a movie.

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IEEE Award

The IEEE giving a well-deserved award. This was at the entrance to the Mansion.

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The Library

One of the lovely rooms inside the Mansion. Before the huts were built to accommodate the ever-growing staff, this room housed German and Italian Navy code/cipher breakers. Later it was home to a typing pool.

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Ballroom

After the huts were built, this room was reclaimed and turned into something of a quiet relaxation room, and occational movie theater.

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Projection

I thought this was a neat touch. The ballroom you saw in the previous slide was an addition long before the war. Here you can see one of the original exterior windows. A movie projector was set up roughly where I'm standing, and projected through a hole where the window was, to be viewed in the ballroom.

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Packard

This is one of the original Packard Sixes that was converted for use as Special Communication Units, including wireless receivers and transmitters, batteries, and a charger.

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Mansion, rear view

The back of the Mansion. There used to be a wireless receiver at the top of the tower (center, distant), but they realized this would make the building conspicuous, so they removed it early on in the war.

I tried to decode what special significance the truck's lettering held, but failed.

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The cottages

One of the original buildings where some of the early code breaking was done. Alan Turing worked here before moving to the huts.

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Polish Memorial

A memorial to the Polish mathematicians who figured out how the military Enigma machine worked...without having ever seen one.

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The Huts

Here you can see Huts 1, 6, and 3 (in the distance). Hut 6 handled the decoding German Army and Air Force codes and ciphers. Hut 3 translated and analyzed the decoded transmissions.

Also note the cool design of the sign, one of many on the grounds.

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Hut 11

This unassuming building housed the original Bombe machines, Turing's electro-mechanical computers that helped decipher the Enigma ciphers.

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Bombe mock-ups

As soon as the war ended, the Bombe machines were disassembled into their constituent parts and wires. Nothing that would leave any trace of what they were for.

Though decades later, a rebuild project was started...and completed.

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Heat, noise, and oil

These were big, loud, smelly machines, that needed constant maintence and adjusting. All the work was done by "Wrens," or the Women's Royal Naval Service.

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Hands-on

In a great addition, the mock-up Bombes have puzzles so you can try your hand at a highly simplfied setup procedure.

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Inside the huts

From Hut 11 you get to walk through Huts 3 and 6. They've set the rooms up to appear roughly as they did during WWII, including blackout shades that do wonders for ambiance, and do make photography a challenge.

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Live! Sort of...

The museum did an excellent job maintaining a WWII atmosphere. In most rooms, actors voices are heard, reading period letters and diaries.

Then there's the clever use of video projection, seen here. Actors in period clothes, adding a bit of life to the scenes.

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Spot the projector

Not wanting to ruin the mood with some anachronistic 21st century A/V gear, the projectors in most rooms are hidden, often in otherwise normal-looking filing cabinets.

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Original

Except here, in the Watch room, where there's an entirely original Panasonic LCD projector. Amazing how ahead of the times they were at Bletchley Park.

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Quiet halls

Though there were many people visiting while I was there, it was still hard to imagine how much louder, and busier, these halls would have been at the peak of the war.

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Manual computer

Though the Bombe machines (and their successors) helped a tremendous amount, much of the code/cipher breaking was still done by people, with pencils and paper. Here you can see one of the crossword-puzzle-lookalikes that many used.

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Block A

As the codebreaking effort expanded, the Bletchley Park team realized they needed something more permanent and substantial than cheap wooden huts.

This is Block A, where Alan Turing set up shop to tackle the Naval Enigma (which was harder to crack than the Army or Air Force, which BP had been reading for years).

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Museum within a museum

Block B showcases not just code breaking, but what life was like in Britain during the war, plus displays about spies and the different machines used to encrypt and decrypt messages.

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Lorenz SZ40

For example, here's a Lorenz SZ40 cipher attachment, a bulkier but a seemingly more secure way to send messages.

The geniuses at Bletchley reverse-engineered how the Lorenz worked without seeing one, thanks in part to carelessness by the Nazis.

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Alan Turing

A cool statue of the legendary Alan Turing. If you don't know who he is, his story is fascinating (and tragic).

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Bombe!

A working Bombe, thanks to meticulous and decade-plus effort by John Harper and his team.

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Spinning wheels

Each group of three (stacked vertically) functions as it's own Enigma machine. The top rotor spins rapidly, and at each full rotation, the rotor below clicks one letter over, when that one finishes its rotation, the one below it clicks over one letter. This goes through every permutation of the starting position of the encoding Enigma possible, in about 12.5 minutes.

This is only part of the whole process of reading enciphered transmissions, but the Bombes sped up the process significantly.

Check out this Bombe in action.

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Inside

Looks like a big computer, doesn't it?

In fact, the Bombes were only a few short steps removed (figuratively, and later literally) from the first electronic computer, the Colossus.

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More wires?

Remember the mock-up from Hut 11? Yeah, I wasn't kidding when I said it was simplified.

Check out the back of this Bombe in action.

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Demo

Every hour or so, there's a wonderful and in-depth demonstration on how the Bombe works.

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Memorial

Since it would be decades before anyone who worked at Bletchley Park could talk about it, the British Government built a memorial to their service, estimated to have taken more than two years off the length of the war.

Check out more, and get info about taking  a visit yourself, at the Bletchley Park website. It's just a hour outside London by train, and well worth the visit.

A Tour of Bletchley Park: Codebreaking that helped win WWII, and the birthplace of the modern computer

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