Daily Mail

Could YOU have been a Bletchley Park CODEBREAKE­R?

How did they recruit the boffins who cracked the Enigma code? By setting them fiendish puzzles now revealed in a new book ...

- by Sinclair McKay EXTRACTED from Bletchley Park Braintease­rs by Sinclair McKay, published by Headline at £12.99 on October 19. to order a copy for £10.39 (valid until October 21), visit mailshop. co.uk/books or call 0844 571 0640. P&P is free on orders o

Not everyone who worked at Britain’s wartime codebreaki­ng centre was a genius on the level of mathematic­ian Alan turing, who invented the machine that cracked the Germans’ Enigma codes. But the thousands of clever young men and women pulled into Bletchley Park — the topsecret country estate in Buckingham­shire — did often share one particular­ly striking attribute: they all had an unusual love of puzzles.

Many of the recruits weren’t intellectu­als at all. they were men and women — from all walks of life — who could not only examine a problem from different angles, but also enjoyed solving it.

Not so different, in fact, from anyone today who gets a kick from Sudoku or crosswords.

During World War II, however, Britain’s fate depended on the codebreake­rs’ ability to decrypt Nazi messages. this burden of responsibi­lity could cause terrible stress, even breakdowns, at the place some Bletchley townsfolk — none the wiser — thought was a lunatic asylum.

But here’s the extraordin­ary thing: when they came off duty, the codebreake­rs often relaxed by diving into yet more puzzles.

So, how did the Government recruit the right people? And if you had been around at the time, would someone be touching you on the shoulder and discreetly telling you to report to ‘Station X’ — the codename for Bletchley?

today I’ll be giving you the sorts of braintease­rs, problems and enigmas that were used either to recruit the codebreake­rs, or to provide a bit of escapism when they were off-duty.

You don’t need to be exceptiona­lly gifted to solve them. But an interest in puzzles, and being able to think laterally, will give you a head start.

As for the directors of Bletchley, at first they were very conservati­ve in their approach to recruitmen­t. In 1938, they began by homing in on university mathematic­s department­s. these students, it was felt, would be best qualified to take on the Enigma, the Germans’ electric cipher machine, which could, in theory, produce 159 million million million combinatio­ns of letters.

But breaking codes was an art as well as a science. And as the Government began erecting the wooden huts that would house Bletchley’s top-secret decryption activity, the recruiters became cannier.

they now started also looking for young people with exceptiona­l language skills. Some of the recruits were young women from aristocrat­ic families, who’d learned other languages at German and Swiss finishing schools in the thirties.

then the net was thrown wider still to scoop up thousands of women who were thinking of joining the Women’s Royal Naval Service, Women’s Auxiliary Air Force or Auxiliary territoria­l Service.

Applicatio­n forms asked: did the candidate enjoy solving puzzles? If the answer was yes, the women were then given several intelligen­ce tests.

THE brightest would be issued with a ticket for a train journey to a secret destinatio­n — after swearing never to reveal the details of the crucial codebreaki­ng work that was about to consume them.

Along the way, other types of talented individual­s were taken on. Poets, for example, had an affinity and ear for the infinite possibilit­ies of language.

Another group were people who could reconstruc­t long- dead languages by breaking different sorts of code — such as the hieroglyph­ics used by pharaohs.

Last but not least were the chess champions. to excel at chess is to hold 100 abstract possibilit­ies in one’s head while trying to out-think one’s opponent — so it followed that chess players made formidable codebreake­rs.

And so they all came flooding into Bletchley Park. For every socially awkward mathematic­ian, there was a confident debutante; for every owlish classicist, conversing in ancient Greek, there was a swing-music-loving Wren who enjoyed doing fiendish crosswords.

And they all put their talents to the best possible use — by helping to shorten World War II by nearly two years.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom