I work in elderly care and a lady I used to look after was based/worked at Bletchley park. She had a certificate thanking her for her contributions.
@brianford849327 күн бұрын
give her a tea and chocky biscuit from us here in Oz.....we succeeded by proxy because of such fine upstanders
@zexfriend27 күн бұрын
I recommend the book “the enigma girls” !! It’s for a younger audience but it’s still very interesting and nice to read for adults. Women shouldn’t be forgotten in men’s wars …
@What_A_Difference_A_Dave_Makes23 күн бұрын
One of my teachers was later found to have been one of the Bletchley Park codebreakers. An immensely well read academic of Polish origin, a quiet and gentle man, not even his family knew of his wartime work until after his passing when his distinctive name appeared in declassified Bletchley documents.
@fatladattheback864218 күн бұрын
What name?
@WhatsUpGazpacho24 күн бұрын
That chap is the right one for the job! He knows so much and is a very great explainer/conveyor of information. Well worth a watch
@jimrobertson593127 күн бұрын
Canada played a roll as well. A secret camp outside of the city of Toronto picked up coded messages from the German consulate in the USA and transmitted them to the UK (obviously before the Americans entered the war ). This facility was also a training centre for operatives , some of which end up being dropped behind enemy lines. It is said that Ian Fleming ( author of the James Bond books ) received training at this facility during the war , while working for British Navel Intelligence. I believe it was also known as “ Camp X “. There is quite a bit of information about this camp available on the internet.
@gentleken786426 күн бұрын
My great Uncle was one of the 'boffins' who worked in Bletchly Park, and more specifically the 'Tunny' machine. I knew him for about ten years before his passing. His house was always filled with contraptions or inventions he'd made himself. Sadly, due to my age, I never got to ask the questions about his time in Bletchly, that I would so love to do now.
@JJLewin121 күн бұрын
Amazing brain power to crack the codes. Thank goodness our Polish friends shared their research at such a delicate time in history. Code breaking never fails to amaze me.
@brianford849327 күн бұрын
"Men and women of the Professor type" So brilliantly English that made my day.✌️
@dad9019 күн бұрын
The whole story around Bletchley Park is incredable, one can only feel grateful.
@danellis-jones15919 күн бұрын
I love the guy guiding Dan through Bletchley. Really great understanding and knowledge, but with a real feeling about the people and not given to hyperbole. But connected to the human endeavour and lives of the people who worked there. Bletchley was vital, but so were so many other groups and people in WW2. I'm not one to split humans up by generation, but the war generation were beyond remarkable
@R08Tam27 күн бұрын
This was fascinating. We are so indebted to the people who worked here
@whzpoor27 күн бұрын
Dan's the Attenborough of History! Love this content, thank you History Hit team!
@michelles229924 күн бұрын
Why does Dan have to be likened to Attenborough
@whzpoor20 күн бұрын
@michelles2299 Attenborough is a titan of natural history broadcasting, celebrating 70 years now, I imagine Dan can be the same. And like Attenborough he invests you in what he's presenting.
@IndigoMayRoe27 күн бұрын
My grandad was a royal signalman from the merchant navy in the first world war. He was placed in HMS Pembroke in London in one of the substations for code breaking/message interceptions in the second world war. He had two grandsons, who both went into computing in the 1960s. I often wonder whether my great grandfather had seen a glimpse of the future and gently guided his grandsons towards computing...?
@davidhovde999627 күн бұрын
There hundreds if videos on cracking the enigma code, few on the capturing of the machine, but I'd love to see one that goes into the story of the invention of the enigma machine and who was or were the inventor(s).
@wrxs178118 күн бұрын
Great tour of Bletchley, and explanations of the workings and magnitude of the project.
@Adelina-29325 күн бұрын
An excellent video, thank you for mentioning the Polish contribution.
@oneworldawakening27 күн бұрын
Amazing history, and wonderful to see the place where it happened. Dr. Kenyon was such an excellent guide and instructor. Beautifully produced as usual on this channel. I just wish Dan had put on a sport coat.
@williamrobinson743527 күн бұрын
It's great to be able to have a mental picture of Bletchley Park, as I've never actually seen the place.. Really interesting. Nice one Dan and team. 🌟👍
@ferrari2k6 күн бұрын
This place is on my go-to list for many years, maybe I can go this year, finally.
@fionad991327 күн бұрын
Wonderful, I learned new things, even though I have read a couple of books on the topic. Excellent film, thanks.
@TallDude7328 күн бұрын
Amazing ingenuity on the German side, and double that on the Allied side.
@stephenconnolly301828 күн бұрын
Nice to hear a true account of the impact of Bletchley park had on the war and history.
@bencollyer229626 күн бұрын
I live 1 mile away from Bletchley park In 1997/98 my friend looking for a football that went in the bush came out with a BomB that the Germans had dropped from ww2 really cool.. His mum didn’t think so when we took it to his house then the bomb squad had to come make sure safe
@VestaJ1710 күн бұрын
thats nuts!! 🤯 imagine if he'd dropped it or somethin
@bencollyer229610 күн бұрын
@ genuinely my friend was in our local newspaper mk citizen for it
@markdunstan103110 күн бұрын
Wow!! Bigger operation than what I thought................
@Dexterschnauzer23 күн бұрын
i work in bletchley, always wanted to visit this place
@greghirst333826 күн бұрын
Brilliant. Thank you!
@taiikomochiyuurichin145927 күн бұрын
It is interesting how that "architecture" of what was built during WWII for the war effort had a certain feel/look about it. I find the same feel in facilities built in Long Beach California for the military forces.
@SarahBeecroft28 күн бұрын
Wonderful tour! Absolutely superb. I've been to Bletchley some years ago and learned comparatively little. Thank you so much.
@roncrouse14695 күн бұрын
Great show.
@brettcurtis571027 күн бұрын
The most amazing part of the Enigma story is how all those hundreds of people involved kept their mouths shut for so many years!!
@michelles229924 күн бұрын
Official secrets act they signed it opening your mouth was akin to treason and punishable
@katherinecollins46858 күн бұрын
Fantastic video
@lynnedelacy284127 күн бұрын
They really thought of everything I would hope we could match the ingenuity today
@pheart238125 күн бұрын
I used to eat my lunch next to that pond when I was at school. The place always seemed to be deserted in the 1980s.
@3allz25 күн бұрын
This guy knows his stuff!
@davidkean568015 күн бұрын
Terrific. There is an Irish fellow, a Librarian,who was a genius at cracking codes during ww2
@mr.angelosonassis30698 күн бұрын
The tour guide says that US-UK espionage collaboration began at Bletchley Park, but in fact it began in New York and Washington at a high level in 1940. After World War II began (and over the objections of Sir Stewart Menzies, wartime head of British intelligence) new-Prime Minister Winston Churchill sent William Stephenson to the United States on 21 June 1940, to covertly establish and run British Security Coordination (BSC) in New York City, over a year before U.S. entry into the war. Stephenson is known by his code name of 'Intrepid'.
@thenoworriesnomad27 күн бұрын
Excellent video...👍👍
@tangerinedream721124 күн бұрын
Visited in 2012 fascinating place, great history. Only complaint was the cafe was rubbish for so many visitors.
@alanprior76509 күн бұрын
Very interesting vid.
@robynduckworth416019 күн бұрын
Fascinating to see behind the scenes. I think it would be really interesting to have a discussion about what you do with intelligence. How do you use it without revealing to the other side that you have intelligence? What decisions were made when news of potential attacks were revealed without doing something that would let the other side know that you knew? Was intelligence ever ignored - either deliberately or accidentally? Did the Germans ever send false messages to see if that would make the Allies react - and reveal their hand?
@John-y5i3l25 күн бұрын
Fascinating. Back in the 60's I worked with the KL7 or Adonis in the Navy. This was just a modern version of Enigma down to the rotors the whole kit and caboodle. Back in the day this would have been classified secret, but don't worry it's now all declassified and you can find it open source on the internet
@michelles229924 күн бұрын
Did you sign the official secrets act?
@John-y5i3l23 күн бұрын
@@michelles2299 Ref my last it is rather inaccurate to say "non com" rather "junior rating". Training on this stuff started very early in our specialist training Sorry suffering from old git brain fade!
@GavTatu28 күн бұрын
what a fantastic guide !
@johnf99110 күн бұрын
Mind boggling! And when did you last see Dan interviewing somebody who was also 6'5"ish?
@adamborawski75927 күн бұрын
Haven't watched it yet, but wanted to ask if they mentioned that copy of enigma brits got from Polish inteligence services or as standard for anglosaxons they ignored other successes and took enigma cracking as their achievement? Respone on above question will give an answer is it reliable and worth to watch.
@N_096827 күн бұрын
They did mention the initial work came from Poland.
@adamborawski75927 күн бұрын
@N_0968 thanks, so ot is worth to watch
@moretar28 күн бұрын
I like the guide's no bullshit attitude
@MERCKXWOOD25 күн бұрын
I wished you'd gone into my detail regarding how they went about breaking the code.
@grahamfisher543627 күн бұрын
@32:52... WOW How many real AND working" ones actually still exist ?? Very few indeed.. fantastic to see. When I've had the opportunity to hold or be at/ in somewhere military connected , that is incredibly and increasingly rare (Eg sat in the pilot and Radar navigators seat of a Vulcan bomber (( and held in my hand the bomb release "nuclear" button!!) The 1st thing I think of is.... All the responsibility !
@alfiedodah979917 күн бұрын
I would like to know what encoding the allies were using at this time?
@brianford849327 күн бұрын
Brains as big as a planet....thank our lucky stars ✌️
@SusanPearce_H27 күн бұрын
Marvinless.
@brianford849327 күн бұрын
@SusanPearce_H I think I just got that....yep... Marvin less.....nice
@Imdevinjt2428 күн бұрын
This is LEGENDARY!!
@polychromide6 күн бұрын
I think the achievements of Alan Turing were amazing but I fail to understand how the work shortened the war by 2 years. The Manhattan Project was completed and the first atomic bomb (designed primarily to defeat Germany) was dropped on 6 August 1945 and the Japanese surrendered 4 weeks later. The war in Europe would have ended in 1945 no matter what.
@marypasco221327 күн бұрын
And they, affectivly, killed the man who broke the code. That's a fine 'Thank you'!😠
@ajc38924 күн бұрын
If everything that is claimed to have shortened the war by two years hadn't been used, we would still be fighting. The facts are the Manhattan project was building a weapon that was originally to be used against Germany.
@gigashock69124 күн бұрын
My Great Grandad was one of the cooks at Bletchley, My grandad says he served Winston Churchill and other senior officials, but strangely, Bletchley doesn't have a file on him............
@johngilliland340928 күн бұрын
I love the BBC radio sitcom set at Bletchley Park, Hut 33.
@chrisvowell289024 күн бұрын
Too true! It is excellent and VERY FUNNY.
@michelles229924 күн бұрын
I have some brass GR office drawer handles do Bletchley park want them
@belindanoonan621727 күн бұрын
This Bletchley guy (sorry to have forgotten his name) is hugely interesting.
@smudger449720 күн бұрын
as a post office telephone Engineer i spent six weeks at Bletchley Park in the 1960s slept in one of those huts but we didnt know yet what they had been used for , also one of the stalwarts who never got the acclaim was Tommy Flowers a post office Engineer who created the worlds first electronic Programmable computer colossus kept secret for over 30 years which enabled the Yanks to claim that they did it first 😂😂😂😂
@WagnerGimenes25 күн бұрын
A great day out.
@djholliday513227 күн бұрын
Brits, never forget your history. Freedom warriors. Americans are still standing with you in solidarity. Allies are rising again. 🇺🇸🇬🇧🏴✊
@jjsmallpiece923426 күн бұрын
A good documentary. The end bit could have been longer, explaining the Enigma machine. Worth watching The Secret War - last episode at this link - 4hrs 7mins in to the video, about Enigma kzbin.info/www/bejne/fXumd2CLm8ajq5o
@joshhoffman197525 күн бұрын
Why would you have code breakers being trained as home guard soldiers, dumb use of resources! Imagine all the lives they saved! 🎉❤😃
@user-tn1vc1xz5d28 күн бұрын
Simon Sebag Montefiore's book is very good. It's a complex story and Simon tells it well, but it's also very technical. Just the way I like it. It's way more complex than I previously thought and way more interesting.
@lasersailor66844 күн бұрын
It’s amazing to me the Germans didn’t pick up what was going on in that estate.
@JR-tr1df28 күн бұрын
in today's age i wonder how many pizzas there would have been delivered to the teams cracking these codes etc 🤔
@PeadeeGames28 күн бұрын
Or curries
@grahamfisher543627 күн бұрын
Try Emailing GCHQ and ask them!
@michelles229924 күн бұрын
None they wouldn't allow deliveroo or just eat into a restricted area
@CraigHepburn-wi6yu12 күн бұрын
Amazing the politicians running for cover! Nothing has changed!
@joãoAlberto-k9x28 күн бұрын
Aliens? No. The allies.
@roryoutdoors543128 күн бұрын
Greetings from Canuckia! We in the colonies (Chatham, ON not UK 😜) were treated to a travelling museum show with a real machine and displays that showed how it worked - fascinating! Watched all the Connections series as a kid on PBS I wish James covered this!
@johnnolan431228 күн бұрын
Stratford Ontario Canada 🇨🇦 hey neighbor, seen that also! Pretty cool
@ӨмірбекӘсел26 күн бұрын
1:21
@Damocles327 күн бұрын
Please leave subscribe popups to the end of the video
@IVAN-bs5bq13 күн бұрын
This was really all done by the Americans - you ask them ?
@Jos-z5v27 күн бұрын
Allies? You mean the British.
@aussiebrawler382427 күн бұрын
Yeah wtf? A Brit calling he's countrymen Allies. 😂
@honeymoongiu24 күн бұрын
its a historical term dude. so when he says allies he means the allied forces, usa, ussr. uk etc. historically they were called the allies. on the other side was the axis power: japan, italy, germany etc.
@hobuspobus27 күн бұрын
ok but those pecs are distracting me 👀 lol what's your workout routine?
@FrederickB.Harvey28 күн бұрын
GLORY!!!'m favoured, $140K every 3weeks! And am retired i can now give back to the locals in my community and also support God's work and the church. God bless America 🇺🇸 ❤️
@SteveDan-x1o28 күн бұрын
Hello, how do you achieve such biweekly returns? As a single parent i haven't been able to get my own house due to financial struggles, but my faith in God remains strong.
@AlvarezSantiago-l7r28 күн бұрын
Excuse me for real?,how is that possible I have struggling financially, how was that possible?
@FrederickB.Harvey28 күн бұрын
Thanks to my co-worker whom God used to give a great opportunity of crossing paths with 'Mrs ELIZABETH ANN LARSON'.
@DaveBradley-k7n28 күн бұрын
YES!!! That's exactly her name (Elizabeth Ann Larson) so many people have recommended highly about her and am just starting with her 😊 from Brisbane Australia🇦🇺
@DavidMilano-rn5kt28 күн бұрын
I have heard a lot of wonderful things about Elizabeth Ann on the news but didn't believe it until now. I'm definitely trying her out
@Mmjk_1228 күн бұрын
What about the other way around? German attempts to break British codes?
@LewisB321728 күн бұрын
Germany’s code breaking attempts had some success but ultimately they were nowhere near as large or skilled as the Allied attempts. Also, it is good to know that later on in the war, the allies essentially entirely owned German spies and their network
@grahamfisher543627 күн бұрын
Can you please do a programme on the equality top secret amazing story/ history of ....... The Admiralty of Bath 🫡 ( Foxhill) 🤫 When I visited Bletchley I could literally feel the "*energy" running through me like lighting *The more one learns about Bletchley!, (and our fates!! should we have lost the war!!!) The more you'll understand and feel that Should you walk around the place..