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Secret Days: Codebreaking in Bletchley Park

Secret Days: Codebreaking in Bletchley Park

Asa Briggs
2.8/5 ( ratings)
Asa Briggs was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park from 1943 to 1945, serving as part of a team of men and women who worked to crack Axis codes and ciphers. Many books have been written about the Buckinghamshire mansion during the Second World War since secrecy rules were relaxed in the 1970s, but Briggs' memoirs are one of only a few first-hand accounts of life at the Park written by a professional historian.

Briggs was a history student at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, when was was declared in 1939. After graduating in 1941, he taught history at Keighley Grammar School and served in the Royal Corps of Signals before joining the Intelligence Corps in 1942. At Bletchley Park, he worked in Hut Six under the guidance of the brilliant mathematician Gordon Welchman.

'Secret Days' is a meticulously researched account of daily life at Bletchley Park. It covers the range of work done at Bletchley Park, from code-breaking to radio interception to translation to 'administration' to catering and maintenance work. It also describes the two camps that accommodated many of Bletchley's employees. Bletchley's vibrant and diverse community fostered many friendships and Briggs' account provides a fascinating insight into social life of 'BP', as it was known.

'Secret Days' also contains a detailed, critical review of the historiography of Bletchley Park.

The title 'Secret Days' reflects the way in which workers at Bletchley Park thought and worked in terms of days, rather than months or years. Each 'day' was divided into three eight-hour shifts, often with deadlines to meet at the end of each shift.
Language
English
Pages
202
Format
Hardcover
Release
May 01, 2011
ISBN 13
9781848326156

Secret Days: Codebreaking in Bletchley Park

Asa Briggs
2.8/5 ( ratings)
Asa Briggs was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park from 1943 to 1945, serving as part of a team of men and women who worked to crack Axis codes and ciphers. Many books have been written about the Buckinghamshire mansion during the Second World War since secrecy rules were relaxed in the 1970s, but Briggs' memoirs are one of only a few first-hand accounts of life at the Park written by a professional historian.

Briggs was a history student at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, when was was declared in 1939. After graduating in 1941, he taught history at Keighley Grammar School and served in the Royal Corps of Signals before joining the Intelligence Corps in 1942. At Bletchley Park, he worked in Hut Six under the guidance of the brilliant mathematician Gordon Welchman.

'Secret Days' is a meticulously researched account of daily life at Bletchley Park. It covers the range of work done at Bletchley Park, from code-breaking to radio interception to translation to 'administration' to catering and maintenance work. It also describes the two camps that accommodated many of Bletchley's employees. Bletchley's vibrant and diverse community fostered many friendships and Briggs' account provides a fascinating insight into social life of 'BP', as it was known.

'Secret Days' also contains a detailed, critical review of the historiography of Bletchley Park.

The title 'Secret Days' reflects the way in which workers at Bletchley Park thought and worked in terms of days, rather than months or years. Each 'day' was divided into three eight-hour shifts, often with deadlines to meet at the end of each shift.
Language
English
Pages
202
Format
Hardcover
Release
May 01, 2011
ISBN 13
9781848326156

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