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  1. 7 de sept. de 2015 · Bletchley Park: Codebreaking's Forgotten Genius. Documentary looking at Gordon Welchman, a codebreaker crucial to the allies defeating the Nazis in World War II. Filmed extensively at Bletchley Park.

  2. Gordon Welchman. William Gordon Welchman (15 June 1906 - 8 October 1985) was a British mathematician, university professor and author. During World War II he was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park (BP) where he became the head of Hut Six. After the war, he moved to the United States and became a US citizen. In 1982 he published the Book The Hut ...

  3. www.gchq.gov.uk › information › gordon-welchmanGordon Welchman

    15 de jul. de 2019 · Gordon Welchman joined Bletchley Park in September 1939. He had a gift for planning and organisation and was appointed Head of Hut 6: he conceived the "diagonal board": a dramatic improvement to Turing's Bombe. Appointed Head of Machine Coordination and Development Section in September 1943, ...

  4. William Gordon Welchman (15 June 1906, Bristol – 8 October 1985, Newburyport, Massachusetts) was a Second World War codebreaker at Bletchley Park. He was a British mathematician, university professor, and author. After the war he moved to the US, and later took American citizenship.

  5. Gordon Welchman 1906 – 1985 A brief biography, based on that formerly displayed in the ‘Hall of Fame’ in Bletchley Park mansion. Within a few weeks of the outbreak of World War 2, Gordon Welchman had reinvented a way of breaking Enigma, which he was then told Bletchley Park was already working on, having learnt about it from the Poles.

  6. William Gordon Welchman, né le 15 juin 1906 et mort le 8 octobre 1985, était un mathématicien britannique et un cryptographe de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, à Bletchley Park.. Welchman fut nommé à la tête de la sixième section des services du code (Alan Turing était le chef de la section huit).Cette section était chargée de casser le code des machines Enigma de l'Armée de Terre et ...

  7. The Turing-Welchman Bombe machine was an electro-mechanical device used to break Enigma-enciphered messages about enemy military operations during the Second World War. The first Bombe - Victory - started code-breaking on Bletchley Park on 14 March 1940 and by the end of the war almost 1676 female WRNS and 263 male RAF personnel were involved in the deployment of 211 Bombe machines.