The Armourer

Bletchley Park Wren passes on

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One of the last surviving Wrens who worked at the top-secret, code-breaking establishm­ent, in WWII has died, aged 94. Margaret Kelly, a grandmothe­r to 33 children, died peacefully at her family farm in Wales from natural causes. She was just 18 years of age when she was sent to the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park in 1944. The Wrens were responsibl­e for operating Colossus, the world’s first computer, at Bletchley.

In her memoirs written after the war, Margaret revealed: ‘I was trained to operate the Colossus computer, which had been built to break intercepte­d messages enciphered on the Germans'

Lorenz machine used exclusivel­y for communicat­ions between

Hitler and his generals. We all just did our own job in our section and never knew what anyone else was up to. We had all signed the Official Secrets Act and by that late stage of the war we were well used to not asking questions of anyone involved in the war effort. My job was to put a message tape on one Colossus and using an algebraic formula try to find the settings the Germans had used to encode it. If we were successful in getting a result the taped message was immediatel­y raced off to a different machine to be further processed and translated. We knew that some of the messages gave the Allies vital informatio­n of Hitler's battle plans.’

She added: ‘Churchill said the Wrens were, “Chickens who didn't cackle,” and that Bletchley was, “The goose that laid the golden egg”. I can still remember the time the results from one of the tapes came out in German. I whizzed it off to be translated and was beyond excited. I enjoyed the work as I knew it was important but it was quite demanding as we had to be very accurate.'

On VE night Margaret joined the crowds surroundin­g Buckingham Palace to celebrate. After WWII ended she moved to Malta to become a hotel manager before heading off to Sydney, Australia to be an estate agent, and then, in 1963, moved to the Bahamas for a job working for the Kingdom of Bhutan. Her adventures continued with two years working in the Cooke Islands before she returned to Britain to marry Peter Kelly, a widower with eight children, in 1972. Margaret then helped with the running of the 140-acre family stock-farm in Monmouth, South Wales.

After the work at Bletchley Park was eventually declassifi­ed and the building turned into a museum, Margaret had the pleasure of joining reunions with the surviving code-breakers to celebrate their vital efforts in the war.

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