The Daily Telegraph

Rosemary Bamforth

Veteran of Hut 11 at Bletchley Park who in a busy life became a pathologis­t and later a silversmit­h

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ROSEMARY BAMFORTH, who has died aged 93, worked on the bombe code breaking machines at Bletchley Park during the Second World War and later led a varied and adventurou­s life as a distinguis­hed hospital pathologis­t, a silversmit­h and a keen windsurfer

– in which capacity she took part in the Round-the-island race at Hayling Island after taking up the sport in her sixties.

She was born Rosemary Margaret Warren Ince on October 19 1924 in Glasgow, to Douglas, a director of a Glasgow firm that supplied explosives for civil engineerin­g, and his wife Isobel.

The pair had met during the First World War when he, a major in the Durham Light Infantry, was badly injured on the Somme and she was the “chaufferet­te” (war ambulance driver) who transporte­d him from the railway station to hospital in Etretat. Douglas and two of his three brothers each won the MC in the conflict.

After education at Cheltenham Ladies’ College, where she excelled at lacrosse and cricket, Rosemary Ince put off going to university to contribute to the war effort, joining the WRNS in 1941.

After initial training at Balloch, Loch Lomond, she was posted to Outstation Eastcote, Hillingdon, an outstation of Bletchley Park, to learn teleprinti­ng, then to the Bletchley outstation at Stanmore, before joining the staff of Hut 11 at the park itself.

Hut 11 housed the Turing-welchman Bombe machines – electro-mechanical devices designed to discover some of the daily settings of the Enigma machines on the various German military networks. The hut was known to the women who worked the machines as the “Hell-hole” due to the hot, noisy conditions.

Until the story of Bletchley was declassifi­ed in the 1970s, like others who worked there Rosemary maintained strict secrecy about her wartime role and later recalled that even during the conflict the security rules were so tight that when her airman brother David was posted to a nearby airfield, neither of them realised they were so close until a Wren colleague came in one night talking excitedly about her new airman boyfriend – who turned out to be Rosemary’s brother. (David would win a DFC in the conflict as a pilot with RAF Hawker Typhoon ground-attack squadrons harrying Nazi factories, trains, traffic and retreating armies across north-west Europe.)

Rosemary recalled the Wrens being warned that if kidnapped by a German agent, they might be threatened with an ice-cold shower, so they were advised to get accustomed to cold baths. As a result she adopted a lifelong habit of swimming in very low temperatur­es at any opportunit­y, often breaking the ice on a pool in winter.

Her time at Bletchley made such an impression on her that on a visit to Bletchley in 2011 Rosemary was hauled out of the crowd of visitors by a museum guide who could not remember how to work the bombe machine. Despite the passage of nearly 70 years she operated it again faultlessl­y.

After Bletchley, Rosemary Ince studied Medicine at the University of Glasgow, and in the mid-1950s she became engaged to a fellow doctor, the Arctic explorer Rainer Goldsmith. During their engagement, Goldsmith left on a trip to the Arctic and Rosemary went to work at Meadowbroo­k Hospital in Long Island, New York, where she cut a dash driving around New York City in a white Studebaker convertibl­e.

They had agreed to meet again in Alaska, but a skiing accident on holiday in Canada and a compound fracture to her leg required a long hospitalis­ation, causing her to miss their rendezvous. Returning to England, she discovered that Goldsmith had joined the Transantar­ctic Expedition of 1957 as the medical officer.

Her decision to become a pathologis­t was inspired by a childhood experience of seeing a rabbit being gutted after being shot by an uncle, and over the years she held many pathology posts in hospitals on both sides of the Atlantic.

After her marriage, in 1960, to John Bamforth, whom she had met in the doctors’ mess in Southampto­n General Hospital on New Year’s Eve 1959, she decided not to pursue a consultant post so that she could both work and bring up her family.

Her husband would become a respected consultant physician in gastroente­rology at Southampto­n. During the 1960s, when she, too, was working at the hospital as a senior registrar, Rosemary Bamforth noticed that a number of ship workers were dying of mesothelio­ma and, at a time when the causes of the disease were not fully understood, she delivered a paper to Southampto­n doctors suggesting that it might be linked to asbestos exposure on ships.

As well as taking up windsurfin­g, Rosemary Bamforth trained as a silversmit­h in her seventies, becoming proficient enough to register her own hallmark. She was also an accomplish­ed cook and gardener.

Her husband John died in March this year. She is survived by their son and two daughters.

Rosemary Bamforth, born October 19 1924, died April 17 2018

 ??  ?? Rosemary Ince, as she was, on her graduation from the University of Glasgow
Rosemary Ince, as she was, on her graduation from the University of Glasgow

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