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E159 - Colossus in Context Part 1

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Manage episode 396036042 series 9395
Content provided by Bletchley Park. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bletchley Park or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
January 2024
Eighty years ago, in January 1944, the first Colossus computer was delivered to Bletchley Park. This machine and the nine that followed it have acquired legendary status within the story of World War Two codebreaking. The machines have also been described as the world’s first large-scale electronic digital computers – direct precursors of the digital world in which we live today.
But in 1944 the computer age still lay far in the future. These machines were built for a specific and vital purpose, to assist with the breaking of the wireless messages of Germany’s senior commanders, enciphered using the Lorenz cipher machine and known at BP as ‘Tunny’.
What role did Colossus actually play in the breaking of Tunny? The Colossus machines were members of a wider family of machines, and the Newmanry – the department in which they operated - was only one of several teams at Bletchley Park, all of whom were crucial to the successful breaking of the cipher.
In this ‘It Happened Here’ episode, Bletchley Park historians Dr Tom Cheetham and Dr David Kenyon are here to place ’Colossus in Context’ and examine where exactly these machines fitted into the effort to break Tunny.
This episode features the following contributors from our Oral History Archive:
Jerry Roberts
Betty Webb
Image: ©Bletchley Park Trust 2024
#BPark, #Bletchleypark, #WW2, #Colossus80,
  continue reading

267 episodes

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E159 - Colossus in Context Part 1

Bletchley Park

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Manage episode 396036042 series 9395
Content provided by Bletchley Park. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bletchley Park or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
January 2024
Eighty years ago, in January 1944, the first Colossus computer was delivered to Bletchley Park. This machine and the nine that followed it have acquired legendary status within the story of World War Two codebreaking. The machines have also been described as the world’s first large-scale electronic digital computers – direct precursors of the digital world in which we live today.
But in 1944 the computer age still lay far in the future. These machines were built for a specific and vital purpose, to assist with the breaking of the wireless messages of Germany’s senior commanders, enciphered using the Lorenz cipher machine and known at BP as ‘Tunny’.
What role did Colossus actually play in the breaking of Tunny? The Colossus machines were members of a wider family of machines, and the Newmanry – the department in which they operated - was only one of several teams at Bletchley Park, all of whom were crucial to the successful breaking of the cipher.
In this ‘It Happened Here’ episode, Bletchley Park historians Dr Tom Cheetham and Dr David Kenyon are here to place ’Colossus in Context’ and examine where exactly these machines fitted into the effort to break Tunny.
This episode features the following contributors from our Oral History Archive:
Jerry Roberts
Betty Webb
Image: ©Bletchley Park Trust 2024
#BPark, #Bletchleypark, #WW2, #Colossus80,
  continue reading

267 episodes

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