In 1941, the Women’s Royal Naval Service began breaking German codes
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In 1941, the Women’s Royal Naval Service began breaking German codes
Photo: Dorothy Du Boisson (left) and Elsie Booker (right) operate a Colossus Mark 2 codebreaking computer, 1943 / National Archives United Kingdom On this day in 1941, the first Women’s Royal Naval Service (Wrens) members arrived at Bletchley Park, Britain’s World War II code-breaking centre, where women made up 75% of the workforce. They operated Bombe machines to decrypt German… SourceThe post On this day in 1941, the Women’s Royal Naval Servi…
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