Please note that most of the simulators will only run in the Internet Explorer browser.
Between 1939 and 1945, the most advanced and creative forms of mathematical
and technological knowledge were combined to master German
communications. British cryptanalysts, Alan Turing at the forefront,
changed the course of the Second World War and created the foundation for
the modern computer.
In 1991 the Bletchley Park, the wartime home of Allied code breaking, was saved
from destruction by Tony Sale and some colleagues. They transformed it into a museum devoted to
the recognition and reconstruction of this crucial aspect of world history,
which had remained completely secret until the early 1970s.
The first stage of the rebuilt Colossus has been working since 6 June 1996.
LEFT: (in wheelchair) Tommy Flowers, designer and engineer in 1943.
CENTRE: HRH The Duke of Kent, patron, switching on.
RIGHT: Tony Sale, rebuilder and curator.
Open a MAP of the Park.
Follow a Virtual Tour of the Park.
Five pages with fifty small pictures
Bletchley Park Mansion
Frode Weierud's Cryptology pages
David Hamer's Enigma pages
Graham Ellsbury's essays on Enigma and the Bombe
Aileen Leblanc and Debbie Anderson's story of the Dayton Codebreakers
This page was originally created by the late Tony Sale, the original founder and curator
of the Bletchley Park Museum and The Codes and Ciphers Heritage Trust
Original Web design by Andrew Hodges, biographer of
Alan Turing.
Current website rebuild is being sponsored by Rich Sale and Partners Freelance SEO Consultant
A big thanks for the support provided by the "Big Oxford Computer Co Ltd"