The other day I visited Bletchley Park – Home of the Code Breakers and it really is a fascinating museum; it has so much in it from the Engima machines, displays on the local country regiment the Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry (who famously secured Peagus’s Bridge) to Toys of the War Era, including lots of old Britains and an amazing Churchill collection. It is a real step back in time.
Bletchley Park is most famous for being the Home of the Code Breakers; at its peak in WWII some 10,000 people were employed at Bletchley Park and its out stations breaking the Enigma Codes, Japanese codes and relaying critical information about the Axis intentions. Churchill described Bletchley Park as 'The geese that laid the golden eggs - but never cackled'.
The first pictures show the mansion; Hut 8 where Turing worked and his office; then a German U-Boat Enigma machine and finally the Turing Bombe that was used to Break the Codes.
Gazza





Bletchley Park is most famous for being the Home of the Code Breakers; at its peak in WWII some 10,000 people were employed at Bletchley Park and its out stations breaking the Enigma Codes, Japanese codes and relaying critical information about the Axis intentions. Churchill described Bletchley Park as 'The geese that laid the golden eggs - but never cackled'.
The first pictures show the mansion; Hut 8 where Turing worked and his office; then a German U-Boat Enigma machine and finally the Turing Bombe that was used to Break the Codes.
Gazza




