Houston Chronicle

Turing, famed World War II codebreake­r, to be the new face of British 50-pound note

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LONDON — Alan Turing, a founding father of computer science and artificial intelligen­ce, was revealed Monday as the face of Britain’s new 50-pound bank note.

Turning was also famed as a World War II codebreake­r whose work was widely credited with hastening the end of the war and saving thousands of lives. But at the time, his achievemen­ts were overshadow­ed following his conviction of engaging in homosexual activity — then a criminal offense in Britain.

Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, said that “as the father of computer science and artificial intelligen­ce, as well as war hero, Alan Turing’s contributi­ons were far-ranging and pathbreaki­ng.” He called Turing “a giant on whose shoulders so many now stand.”

Carney made the announceme­nt Monday at Manchester’s Science and Industry Museum, which will also feature an exhibition of the 12 finalists who were considered for the note, including theoretica­l physicist and cosmologis­t Stephen Hawking.

During World War II, Turing worked at Bletchley Park, where he helped to develop a machine that cracked the Enigma code used by Nazi Germany.

His work also laid the groundwork for the modern computer and artificial intelligen­ce. His famous “Turing test” is still used as a benchmark for examining whether a machine can be considered to be thinking.

After the war, Turing pleaded guilty to a charge of “indecency” related to his homosexual­ity and was sentenced to chemical castration. In 1954 — at age 41 — he was found dead from cyanide poisoning. A bitten apple was found by his bedside.

British Prime Minister Theresa May tweeted Monday that Turing’s “pioneering work” played a “crucial part” in ending World War II. “It is only fitting that we remember his legacy and the brilliant contributi­on LGBT people have made to our country” on the new 50-pound note, she wrote.

Dermot Turing, Alan Turing’s nephew, said in an emailed statement that the entire family was “delighted.”

The Oscar-winning 2014 biopic “The Imitation Game,” starring Benedict Cumberbatc­h, brought further attention to the complex math genius and his team’s role in the defeat of Adolf Hitler. On Monday, Cumberbatc­h told the BBC, “I couldn’t think of a more deserving candidate.” Turing was an “extraordin­ary human being, a unique mind, and he suffered a great deal in an intolerant time,” he said.

In 2013, after a lengthy campaign, Queen Elizabeth II granted Turing a royal pardon for his “crime” of homosexual­ity. In 2017, under legislatio­n that became known as “Turing’s law,” Britain granted pardons to thousands of gay and bisexual men who were convicted of offenses related to their sexuality.

 ?? Matthew Lloyd / Bloomberg News ?? Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, announces Alan Turing, the founding father of computer science, as the character to be shown on the new 50-pound note, Britain’s highest denominati­on in circulatio­n.
Matthew Lloyd / Bloomberg News Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, announces Alan Turing, the founding father of computer science, as the character to be shown on the new 50-pound note, Britain’s highest denominati­on in circulatio­n.

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