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30 November 2003
Source of photos and maps: Multimap.


Tony Sale's Codes and Ciphers in the Second World War:

http://www.codesandciphers.org.uk/

The history, science and engineering of cryptanalysis in World War II

Between 1939 and 1945, the most advanced and creative forms of mathematical and technological knowledge were combined to master German communications. British cryptanalysts, Alan Turing at the forefront, changed the course of the Second World War and created the foundation for the modern computer. In 1991 the Bletchley Park, the wartime home of Allied code breaking, was saved from destruction by Tony Sale and some colleagues. They transformed it into a museum devoted to the recognition and reconstruction of this crucial aspect of world history, which had remained completely secret until the early 1970s.

Tony Sale's Walking Tour of Bletchley Park, with some 50 photographs:

http://www.codesandciphers.org.uk/bletchleypark/index.htm

Bletchley Park Museum website: http://www.bletchleypark.org.uk/

Among many books about Bletchley Park, the novel Enigma, by Robert Harris, depicts bleary codebreaking toil and dreary Bletchley facilities better than a recent a TV show based on the book.


Eyeballing

Bletchley Park


Bletchley Park Mansion
Source

Bletchley Park (BP) was the World War 2 dilpidated forerunner of futuristic GCHQ located at Cheltenham.