Misread Signals
How History Overlooked Women Codebreakers
Author(s): Dermot Turing
Format: Hardback
Publisher: The History Press Ltd, United Kingdom
Imprint: The History Press Ltd
ISBN-13: 9781803997933, 978-1803997933
Synopsis
'It is inspirational. Helen Fry, author of Women in Intelligence
'An important and exciting contribution to the history. Clare Mulley, author of Agent Zo
Bletchley Park is remembered as a land of male intellectuals who were supported by a staff of women in menial roles, with figures such as Alan Turing, William Tutte and John Tiltman taking centre stage. These are the men who worked on the fearsome Enigma and Lorenz ciphering systems the men who helped sway the course of the war in the Allies favour.
But, as is often the case in the historical record, this is not the whole story. Women were not just secretaries and assistants: they had serious full-on codebreaking roles. And this was not just at Bletchley, or in the UK, or even only in the Second World War. These were women like Margaret Rock, who solved Enigma and other machine problems; Agnes Driscoll, the first US Navy codebreaker; and Asta Friedrichs, who postwar became a prime source for information on German Foreign Office codebreaking. Yet, when the histories were written, these women and many more besides somehow got left out.
Who were they? What did they achieve? How did they vanish? In Misread Signals, expert codebreaking historian Dermot Turing turns his attention to these long-ignored women and puts their contributions back in the spotlight where they belong.