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Station X

The codebreakers of Bletchley Park

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In 1939, the first of several hundred people -- students, professors, chess players, military officers, actresses, and debutantes -- quietly reported to a Victorian mansion outside London. This became "Station X", the Allies' top-secret center for deciphering enemy codes.Their task was to break the ingenious Enigma cipher, used by the Nazis for their high-level communications. The settings for the Enigma machine changed continually. The Nazi operators had 159 quintillion (159 followed by 18 zeroes) possibilities from which to choose. This gifted group achieved the impossible. Not only did these people shorten the war by years -- they were essential to the victories in the Atlantic and North Africa and to the planning of the D-Day landings -- Station X was also the birthplace of the world's first programmable computer and the successful Anglo-American intelligence partnership.

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Station X, Michael Farris Smith

Language
Released
2000
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Subtitle
The codebreakers of Bletchley Park
Language
English
Publisher
Channel 4
Released
2000
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
ISBN10
0752261959
ISBN13
9780752261959
Original title
Station X
Rating
3.9 out of 5
Description
In 1939, the first of several hundred people -- students, professors, chess players, military officers, actresses, and debutantes -- quietly reported to a Victorian mansion outside London. This became "Station X", the Allies' top-secret center for deciphering enemy codes.Their task was to break the ingenious Enigma cipher, used by the Nazis for their high-level communications. The settings for the Enigma machine changed continually. The Nazi operators had 159 quintillion (159 followed by 18 zeroes) possibilities from which to choose. This gifted group achieved the impossible. Not only did these people shorten the war by years -- they were essential to the victories in the Atlantic and North Africa and to the planning of the D-Day landings -- Station X was also the birthplace of the world's first programmable computer and the successful Anglo-American intelligence partnership.