Calgary woman awarded for Second World War code-breaking efforts

B00Mer

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Sep 6, 2008
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Calgary woman awarded for Second World War code-breaking efforts



An 88-year-old Calgary woman has been honoured by the British High Consulate for her work during the Second World War.

Marion Booth received the Bletchley Park Commemorative Badge at a ceremony on Tuesday. The award is named for the secret English code-breaking facility featured in the award-winning film "The Imitation Game."

Booth was just 17 years old when she was recruited to join the Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service – also known as “the Wrens.”

“Seeing all these boys I was in high school with going off to war at 17, 18, 19 years of age,” she said, “we girls all just decided we wanted to do something.”

The Wrens worked with “humungous” radios to intercept Japanese and German Morse code signals that would later be translated to English, she says. Booth also learned Russian along the way.

Her work was classified for a quarter of a century, and Booth says it was difficult to keep her past hidden from her husband and children for so long.

Now she’s happy to see it celebrated publicly.

“It means that what we did didn't go unnoticed,” she said. “We did a lot in Canada to help the war effort.”



source: Calgary woman awarded for Second World War code-breaking efforts | CTV News
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Good video on the subject.........








The extraordinary, but previously hidden, story of a British engineer, Tommy Flowers, and a talented British mathematician, Bill Tutte.


Tutte's codebreaking skill, and the engineering genius of Flowers, gave rise to Colossus, the world's first programmable computer. Tutte is revealed as having been responsible for what experts have described as the single most important intellectual feat of World War Two - without this work, D Day would never have happened.


Tutte broke a code ten times tougher than Enigma and, with a handful of brilliant men, allowed Churchill to 'hack in' to Hitler's own hotline, win the War and usher in the age of computers. Tutte's breathtaking genius was exploited by an amazing array of talent at Bletchley Park (the UK's top secret intelligence base) who then broke into Hitler's own communications network, changing the War and the world.






Codebreaker: Bletchley Park's Lost Heroes | TVO










 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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Her work was classified for a quarter of a century, and Booth says it was difficult to keep her past hidden from her husband and children for so long.
that would have been incredibly challenging not to reveal to a partner

obviously a brilliant and dedicated woman
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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We did.


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They bloody waited long enough eh wot !8O
weeeeeeeeeeeeeell think about it... CANADA AND a WOMAN

can it get any more frightening for the penally challenged?