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Alan Turing, The Enigma Code Breaker: Facts About His Life, Achievements, Sexuality & Death


Alan Turing as a young boy. (Photo by Getty Images)
23 June 1912 Born Alan Mathison Turing in Maida Vale, London, the second son of Julius and Sara Turing
October 1931 Turing takes up a mathematics scholarship at King’s College Cambridge, earning a first-class degree. In 1935 he is elected to a junior research fellowship
January 1937 A paper by Turing is published that is later recognised as laying the foundation of computer science
June 1938 At the age of 25, Turing receives his PhD from Princeton for his dissertation Systems of Logic Based on Ordinals
4 September 1939 Turing arrives at Bletchley Park to begin his wartime work on code and cipher systems. He goes on to lead the team in Hut 8 (left) ....

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Paul Davis On Crime: One Day in August: Ian Fleming Enigma and the Deadly Raid on Dieppe


 
Some years ago, I came across
an account of the disastrous World War II raid on Dieppe written by a
British naval intelligence officer who viewed the raid from the deck of a
warship off the coast of France. 
The intelligence report read
like a thriller, which should come as no surprise, as the naval intelligence
officer was Royal Navy Lt. Commander Ian Fleming,
who went on to write the James Bond thrillers. 
The Dieppe Raid was the stuff
of thrillers, and Canadian historian David O’Keefe has written a fine
book about the failed operation called “One Day in August: Ian Fleming, ....

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Paul Davis On Crime: My Washington Times 'On Crime' Column: 'One Day In August: Ian Fleming, Enigma And The Deadly Raid On Dieppe


 
Some years ago, I came across
an account of the disastrous World War II raid on Dieppe written by a
British naval intelligence officer who viewed the raid from the deck of a
warship off the coast of France. 
The intelligence report read
like a thriller, which should come as no surprise, as the naval intelligence
officer was Royal Navy Lt. Commander Ian Fleming,
who went on to write the James Bond thrillers. 
The Dieppe Raid was the stuff
of thrillers, and Canadian historian David O’Keefe has written a fine
book about the failed operation called “One Day in August: Ian Fleming, ....

United States , United Kingdom , Milton Keynes , Haute Normandie , English Channel , United Kingdom General , James Bond , John Godfrey , David Okeefe , Ian Fleming , Royal Navy , Office Of Naval Intelligence , Royal Navy Directorate Of Naval Intelligence , Naval Intelligence Division , Intelligence Committee , Ministry Of Economic Warfare , Washington Times , One Day , Deadly Raid , World War , Commander Ian Fleming , Dieppe Raid , Davido Keefe , American Codebreakers , Naval Enigma , Naval Intelligence ,

BOOK REVIEW: 'One Day in August' - Washington Times


I reached out to David O’Keefe and I asked him why the Dieppe Raid was controversial, tragic and something of a mystery.
“In less than 9 hours on August 19th, 1942, over 1,000 Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen died in a raid on the German-held port of Dieppe, France in the English Channel,” Mr. O’Keefe said. “The vast majority of these deaths, 907, were taken by the Canadians, but the British and the Americans (fighting their first actions against Hitler in Europe) also paid a heavy toll. Right from the start, the excuses given for the inception and the intent behind the raid did not seem to fully explain what the Allies were attempting to do on that one day in August.” ....

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