Bletchley Park is unique. It combines a key role in modern history along with being the birthplace of the computer. I cannot think of a place more worthy of our interest, our support and our government's support. Please join me in raising awareness of the fundamental importance of Bletchley Park and in saving Bletchley Park so that it will still be there for future generations to visit, appreciate and understand.

Bletchley Park is also the birthplace of the computer. The world's first programmable, digital, electronic computer: Colossus was invented and built at Bletchley Park during World War Two to speed the reading of encrypted German messages.

Welcome to the saving Bletchley Park website. Thousands of people worked at Bletchley Park during World War Two to decode messages that the German forces transmitted, most notably by Hitler to the German high command. The cracking of the codes used, the use of the intelligence gained and the subsequent related actions of the Allies is said to have shortened World War Two by two years possibly saving 22 million lives. The critical importance of Bletchley Park in world history cannot be denied.

Campaign News

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Monday, 09 Feb 2015 Saving Bletchley Park: The Book! I've just finished writing a book about the campaign to save Bletchley Park assisted by my great friend Stevyn Colgan. It will be out in Spring 2015, You can get a copy of the special first edition which includes your name printed in the back and a special first edition cover on the Unbound website Saving Bletchley Park. I write about the campaign starting in 2008, with highlights like getting on the BBC news and Stephen Fry involved all the way through to the visit in 2014 by the Duchess of Cambridge.

You can also sign up to come to the fabulous launch party and all manner of other interesting goodies on the Unbound website. All updates from me are now on my blog "The Adventures of a Cheeky Geek" come and chat to me there or on Twitter: @Dr_Black. Thanks very much for your support. Take care Sue back to top

Wednesday, 02 June 2010 BCS Wiltshire Last week I gave a talk about my campaign to a great audience in Swindon from BCS Wiltshire. Nick Miers was also there talking about the Enigma machine. A great evening was had by all and it was very heartwarming to receive such support from people for my campaign and for Bletchley Park. Thank you to the organisors and to everyone who came :)) back to top

Sunday, 18 April 2010 Can Twitter save Bletchley Park? Today was an amazing day!! Thanks to the amazing supporters that Bletchley Park and the campaign have Kelsey and I came to Denver, Colorado to present our paper "Can Twitter save Bletchley Park?" at the Museums and the Web conference 2010. The presentation went down really well with lots of support from the great people at the conference. The story of how we got here is well told by MSN's Matt Ball on the MSN Tech and Gadgets page today :)) Thank you so much to these amazing people for donating the money to allow us to present today raising awareness of Bletchley Park across the museum community: PJBryant Andy Layton

Alexandra Gradosielska

Jas Dhaliwal

Mark O'Neill georgiawonder Kailua09 unclewilco Richard Rixham Michael Burek Martyn Davies Maggie Berry Melanie Campbell Matthew Sylvester (@mssres) Richard Gough Rory Cellan-Jones Alan Burkitt-Gray John Poole @spudbrain @Eingang, OU/UniSussex Serious Gaming EduTech Jane @sammachin Gideon Williams Nicholas Creswell @drmcewan Mr Grasshead, Comandante Monkey, and dude jimjar Bradley Martin Paul Clarke Sarah Pearson Christine Arrowsmith @INFOSEC_Maven Britt Warg stefan @patroclus Mal Karohemd @pickwick @NoLimitsAsia Elrik Merlin Karlin Lillington Astrid Byro Chris Foote (Spike) Darryl Skeard Sarah Winmill @parsingphase @nmeth Peter Knight @jasew Marie Kinsey Miki Burgess @3djamie Matt Ball J David Morgan Gregory Collins Andrew Back Hannah Dee Sue Houghton Alan Nolan-Davies Eli Ezeugoh Paul Thomson Chris Hart Kerrin Mansfield Pat Galea All of you have really helped to save Bletchley Park!! back to top

Thursday, 25 March 2010 Government Funding for Bletchley Park!!! Well. It has finally happened!!! £250k government funding announced today for Bletchley Park. Hooray!!!!!!! Yippee!!!! Woohoo!!!!! Thank you so much to everyone who has supported the campaign. There have been so many people involved that they are too numerous to mention, read my previous blog posts for details of some of those who have given their support to save Bletchley Park. Thanks to everyone on Twitter who has supported the campaign. Power to the people! Look what we did guys!!! :))) Of course, it is not completely over...we do need to get this amount of money coming in each year for another four years while Bletchley Park get everything there sorted out from the potholes in the car park to the restoration of the fabulous codebreaking huts.But, this is a milestone, and a big one. Thank you DCMS. Details below: Culture Secretary Ben Bradshaw will visit Bletchley Park on Thursday to announce the allocation of £250,000 DCMS funding for urgent repairs at the neglected WW2 Codebreaking Centre. The grant, which comes from the reallocation of under-spends elsewhere in the DCMS budget for 2009-2010, will allow the Bletchley Park Trust to tackle a variety of badly needed works on the ageing site including resurfacing pot-holed roads and car-parks and new roofs for iconic, at-risk, codebreaking buildings. Simon Greenish, CEO of the Bletchley Park Trust, welcomed today's announcement as hugely significant, saying: "This enormously-appreciated funding boost will not only enable vital repair and maintenance of this WW2 site for the benefit of our rapidly growing number of visitors, but it also represents endorsement by the DCMS that Bletchley Park is a place of national importance which deserves Government support.” Ben Bradshaw commended the work of the Bletchley Park Trust, saying: “The work carried out at Bletchley Park had a huge impact on the course of the war, and the museum does a brilliant job in bringing this alive for people of all ages. But, having doubled its visitor numbers over the last three years, it urgently needs funds to keep it in good condition. I am delighted to announce this grant which will help renovate the buildings and ensure that future visitors enjoy a really high quality experience when they come here.” The announcement comes after a previous landmark was reached by the Trust in October 2009 when the Heritage Lottery Fund announced a first round pass for the Bletchley Park Trust application for museum development funding and awarded £460,000 to work up detailed plans. These will be submitted early to mid 2011 in a bid to secure the £4.1 million needed to realize the plans and subject to the Trust raising the £1 million needed for match-funding the bid. The Trust will then work on raising a further £5 million to complete the development. back to top

Thursday, 25 March 2010 Ada Lovelace Day 2010 Well it's already Ada Lovelace day 2010!! That year went quickly :) Thanks to a brilliant idea last year by the wonderful Suw Charman-Anderson people all over the world have pledged to blog about a Woman in Technology that they are inspired by. Just have a look at the fabulous map of #ALD10 contributors from all over the world. Well, I've finally, after much prevarication, decided who to blog about: BCSWomen. There are more than one thousand women in tech who are members of BCSWomen and they inspire me individually and as a group, every day, to get out there and do my job. No matter whether we are facing problems at work or at home, the sort of things that we all have to face at one time or another, BCSWomen are there for each other. We support each other, encourage each other, share successes and failures together, and are growing older together. My heroines. The women who just get out there every day and make a difference. Thank you all for the support and encouragement you have given me over the last nine years. I couldn't have done what I have without you. Ada Lovelace #ALD10 @findingada #ALD10 @findingada back to top

Tuesday, 16 February 2010 Can Twitter save Bletchley Park? Following on from a campaign on Twitter to raise money via a JustGiving page, enough money has now been raised to send Kelsey Griffin and Sue Black to the Museums and the Web conference to present their joint paper: Can Twitter save Bletchley Park? The paper was co-authored with Professor Jonathan Bowen of Museophile, a friend of Sue's. Kelsey and Sue are pictured above with Simon Greenish, Bletchley Park Director and Stephen Fry on Stephen's visit to Bletchley Park last year. The trip will give them the opportunity to promote Bletchley Park to a US and international audience in April in Denver, Colorado. back to top

Tuesday, 16 February 2010 APPG for Bletchley Park I heard last week that following a promise from MP Tom Watson last year an All Party Parliamentary Group on Bletchley Park will be set up this month. This is good news as it will provide a focal point for government ministers from any party to meet, hear about and discuss issues related to Bletchley Park. Watch this space for more news :) back to top

Tuesday, 29 September 2009 âVictory at Bletchley Park Dayâ - Fab funding announcement!! Fabulous announcement this morning that the Heritage Lottery Fund have approved the proposal submitted by Bletchley Park a few months ago to upgrade the site :))) Thanks *so* much to everyone that has helped and supported the campaign. BUT please remember that this is not the beginning of the end, but the end of the beginning....... Bletchley Park still needs your help. On top of the HLF money it still needs £250k per annum operational funding for the next 5 years plus another £6 million funding. We must save Bletchley Park!! Here is the official announcement: Bletchley Park are to receive a Heritage Lottery Fund development grant



The Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) has given the green light to the Bletchley Park Trust to work up plans to help transform Bletchley Park into a world class heritage and educational centre it was announced today. Development funding of £460,500 was awarded to help progress their plans.



More details at:



http://www.bletchleypark.org.uk/news/docview.rhtm/592098 back to top

Thursday, 27 August 2009 Government response a disgrace 10 Downing Street’s response – or lack of response – to the Save Bletchley Petition, signed by almost 22,000 people, is a disgrace and a slap in the face to the thousands of people that worked there. Bletchley Park not only saved countless British lives and shortened the war by two years, but it is also the birthplace of modern computing and a vital site in the UK’s 20th Century wartime and scientific heritage. If the Government truly acknowledge the contribution made as significant why are they failing to help secure its future?



The funds already allocated to the park will go some small way to fixing a tiny number of problems, but the whole site, and particularly the huts where the most important work was done, are in a dire state of repair. This setback will not stop us campaigning – despite this response, we still believe that investment in saving Bletchley Park would be hugely beneficial to the UK, in terms of saving incredibly important history, knowledge and fantastic stories for the nation. back to top

Tuesday, 21 July 2009 More Campaign Success! More good news....following my meeting with Phil Willis MP recently he has tabled an Early Day Motion on Bletchley Park :) Please encourage your MP to sign it. You can email your MP though the WriteToThem website, it only takes two minutes of your time, so please if you are a UK resident do it now. If enough of us email we will make a difference. Thank you back to top

Friday, 10 July 2009 Campaign success! I've got lots to report....last month Chris Lee from New Media Knowledge recorded "Twittering Bletchley Park"a podcast of me talking about using social media in the Saving Bletchley Park campaign. I also talk in general about Bletchley Park and why it should be saved, do give it a listen. I had an interesting meeting with Professor Barry Cooper who is Chair of the 2012 Alan Turing Year Centenary Committee where we discussed possible events for 2012. Mind you there is an impressive line of events already lined up. The Director of Bletchley Park, Simon Greenish and I were invited to the Europython 2009 conference in Birmingham to give a keynote talk about Bletchley Park on July 1st. We were given a very warm welcome from a great group of people. It was my first talk to such a big crowd, about 450 in the audience! But I think it went well :) Click on the photo of me above to go to a video of the talk, Simon Greenish talks first about the history and plans for Bletchley Park. My sections starts at around 15 minutes. At the end we unveil an Enigma machine on stage....the audience loved it and were asking questions for about an hour afterwards :))) Last weekend I gave an invited talk at the Opentech conference in London, this time about women in tech. I had a nice surprise when I introduced myself. I said as part of my intro that I campaign for Bletchley Park and got a round of applause and some cheers. Popular support for Bletchley Park and the camapign is growing :) I spoke to some very interesting people at the conference, both speakers and audience. During one of the breaks I had a lovely chat with Tom Watson MP. I asked him what he could do to help save Bletchley Park. To my astonishment he said that he would set up a cross party parliamentary group on Bletchley Park. Go Tom! What a great guy :) This week I had a long standing appointment to see Phil Willis MP to talk to him about Bletchley Park and the campaign. He proved to be another great guy, because after talking to him for just 5 or 10 minutes he said that he will table an Early Day Motion on Bletchley Park! What a result! Tom Watson and Phil Willis, two guys in government who really are doing a great job :) Finally: great news announced today! All surviving Bletchley Park veterans are to be given medals for their service. Great that the recognition of the contribution made by these fine people is finally being recognised :) back to top

Thursday, 21 May 2009 Why I'm ashamed to be British! It is a bad day for the Save Bletchley Park campaign today :( I recently wrote a short comment piece for the Telegraph newspaper which I encourage you to read, on "Why I'm ashamed to be British". Today, having just listened to the Lords' questions I am also embarrassed. The wonderful Baroness McIntosh of Hudnall asked Lord Davies of Oldham "...what support the UK government will give to the restoration and development of Bletchley Park." Baroness McIntosh of Hudnall was joined by Lord Clement-Jones, Lord Eden of Winton, Baroness Trumpington, Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, Lord Selkirk of Douglas and Lord Lea of Crondall in asking for substantial funding to support Bletchley Park. In a nutshell the reply from Lord Davies of Oldham was that the government are already doing enough. What utter rubbish! You can see the discussion on the UK Parliament TV channel here starting at around 5.50 minutes. It is also in text form here on Hansard. There is fantastic support from the Lords, with several saying that they have strong connections to Bletchley Park, but the government position is clear: some money has been given to Bletchley Park by English Heritage and Milton Keynes council and that is it. What a disgrace! I am absolutely and utterly disgusted. What is the point of us having a House of Lords if their opinions are brushed aside like this? If you are similarly annoyed and based in the UK, please write to your MP. Here is a draft letter. If you have the time, a letter in your own words is more effective, it takes a little longer, but has a much bigger impact. Letters don't need to be long, one paragraph is enough. If you could add a short paragraph about what Bletchley Park means to you, that would be great! Send your letter to your MP at the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA.

If you have the time, a letter in your own words is more effective, it takes a little longer, but has a much bigger impact. Letters don't need to be long, one paragraph is enough. If you could add a short paragraph about what Bletchley Park means to you, that would be great! Send your letter to your MP at the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA. You can find out who your local MP is here If you are not in the UK please sign the international petition and talk to anyone you know who may be able to help put pressure on the UK government. Thank you so much! We must save Bletchley Park! back to top

Monday, 11 May 2009 Stephen Fry visits Bletchley Park Today was an absolute Red Letter Day for me and for Bletchley Park :) On February 4th I blogged about Stephen Fry very kindly tweeting: #bpark You might want to sign the Save Bletchley Park petition. Read @Dr_Black 's reasons why on http://is.gd/ikEh - BP won us the war! stephenfry Stephen Fry and today took that one step further. Stephen Fry visited Bletchley Park and tweeted the highlights to his almost half a million followers on Twitter!

walking around BP and getting the real Bletchley Park experience: it kind of grows on you as you wander around the site, meeting the remarkable people and hearing the incredible stories, sometimes from people who actually worked there during WW2! After Stephen had agreed to visit Bletchley Park for the day I had, as instructed, (but only just) managed to keep it a secret, that's not bad considering a) it was probably two months of me keeping my mouth shut and b) it was going to be an exciting day that I, frankly, had only dreamed of truly happening. I had managed not to tweet or anything about Stephen's visit to make sure that he could have a relaxing daywalking around BP and getting the real Bletchley Park experience: it kind of grows on you as you wander around the site, meeting the remarkable people and hearing the incredible stories, sometimes from people who actually worked there during WW2!





So, this morning I got up said goodbye to my lovely family and started the journey up to BP. When I was on the train to London I noticed a disturbing tweet from Rory Cellan Jones aka @ruskin147 saying that he was on his way to Bletchley Park! I was outraged and made sure I told him so when we met up (sorry Rory!) Once we got to BP I told Christian aka @documentally off as well for tweeting about Stephen's visit. It turned out that he was just winding me up, nothing new there ;) Then, as we were waiting for Stephen to arrive, and after me telling everyone off, Stephen sent a tweet saying that he had just arrived at Bletchley Park! Needless to say I managed not to tell Stephen off! ;)

Over lunch we all had a chat about everything and Simon showed Stephen an Enigma machine. You can see a video of that here. After lunch Stephen unveiled the new griffins at the front of the mansion house and we then we had a great time touring BP and talking to many of the fabulous people that work there, like Tony Sale seen above demonstrating Colossus. 75% of the fantastic staff at Bletchley Park work there as volunteers. We also met a lovely lady, Dorothy Richards nee Blake, seen below and talking to Stephen Fry here , who worked at BP during WW2 and was on her first trip back since the 40s. There are still over 1000 BP veterans alive, remarkable people who we could, if funds were available, record their fascinating memories. Wouldn't that be great? I've heard many interesting and exciting stories since I've been involved and I've only met a few of these amazing people.





If you search on Twitter for #bpark you will find a trail of the day's happenings, Stephen Fry so obviously enjoyed himself and was of course extremely knowledgeable and very quick to pick up everything that he had not known beforehand. A genuinely lovely person and now a great supporter of Bletchley Park. Thank you so much @stephenfry you made my day and that of everyone at Bletchley Park. I think Bletchley Park will hopefully be safe now that you are involved. Thank you from the very bottom of my heart. back to top

Friday, 03 April 2009 Ada Lovelace Day Today is Ada Lovelace day. Thanks to a brilliant idea by the wonderful Suw Charman-Anderson people all over the world have pledged to blog about a Woman in Technology that they are inspired by. I've been thinking long and hard since the challenge was laid down and have finally decided who to blog about. There were so many to choose from, famous women like Steve Shirley and Wendy Hall both of whom are fabulous role models and truly wonderful people. I've been very fortunate to know both of them. I have met so many women through my work setting up and running LondonBCSWomen and then BCSWomen who are absolutely fabulous and much as I'd like to, I can't mention them all because it would just take so long. But in a way, isn't that great....there are *so many* fabulous women in technology, that I know, that I don't have time to write about them all. But you know who you are girlfiends....and you all inspire me every day, even now eleven years after setting up the first group. How time flies :) Ada Lovelace One great woman that I would like to mention quickly is Aliza Sherman, I met her in Brussels in 1998 and she inspired me to eventually set up BCSWomen. Thanks Aliza :) I also must mention that I have also been inspired by female colleagues and students at both London South Bank University and my current workplace, the University of Westminster. There are many great female computer scientists around......but we need more. The woman in technology that I am blogging about today is someone that I found out about at Bletchley Park. She was born Aldrina Nia Vaughan, latterly known as Dina St Johnston. Dina set up the UK's first software house in Brickendon, Hertfordshire in February 1959. She left school at 16 (like me ;)) and got a job working with the British Non-Ferrous Metals Research Association in London. At the same time she studied four nights a week at Croydon Polyechnic. She passed her exams and wanted to go to Royal Holloway and Bedford College but because most places at that university were reserved for ex-service people and the remaining places went to men she was unable to gain a place. She therefore went to Sir John Cass College and took and external University of London degree in mathematics. In 1953 she moved to Elliot Brothers and was sent to attend the Cambridge summer school on Programming in 1954. Her programming skills soon drew her to the attention of the computing division. She worked there for a further five years before setting up her own company: Vaughan Programming Services (VPS). Please read 'An appreciation of Dina St Johnston (1930-2007) Founder of the UK's first Software House' by Simon Lavington for more details of her life and achievements. She sounds like a feisty woman, she remained an active programmer until 1996, I really wish I had met her. I would like to know more about Dina St Johnston, do let me know if you have any information you can share about her, I haven't found much in a brief web search. Many thanks to Lin Jones @linjones on Twitter, volunteer guide at Bletchley Park for giving me the journal paper mentioned above after a discussion about Dina St Johnston last Saturday. I must remember to blog about the rest of our very interesting conversation sometime soon. So, Happy Ada Lovelace Day everyone! Let's celebrate women in technology, do please consider blogging about a women in technology that you know.I would love to read it :) Ada Lovelace Day tags: AdaLovelaceDay09, #ALD09 back to top

Monday, 23 March 2009 TNMOC receives Â£100k!! Great news this week as the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park receives it's biggest ever donation :) Fabulous news!! Lovely pic of the wonderful Tony Sale showing Stepehn Fry (also wonderful of course ;)) the rebuilt Colossus housed in TNMOC. back to top

Thursday, 19 March 2009 Bletchley Park wins Building with Pride! Fabulous news: Bletchley Park has won Wickes Builing with Pride competition! People have been voting for the last two months for the builing that they are most proud of in the UK, the fact that Bletchley Park has won means that people all over the country care about Bletchley Park, that's such great news :) More on the story from the local newspaper The Milton Keynes Citizen. Also today a great blog post from Rory Cellan Jones, the BBC technology correspondent on our use of social media to engage everyone with the plight of Bletchley Park. It's entitled Bletchley Park's Social Media War. back to top

Sunday, 08 March 2009 Please write a letter to your MP Thanks very much to Chris Campbell who has produced a draft letter that we can all use in the UK to send to our MPs. If you have the time, a letter in your own words is more effective, it takes a little longer, but has a much bigger impact. Letters don't need to be long, one paragraph is enough. If you could add a short paragraph about what Bletchley Park means to you, that would be great!



Send your letter to your MP at the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA.



You can find out who your local MP is here Thank you! back to top

Sunday, 22 February 2009 Stephen Fry Tweets "Save Bletchley Park" On the evening of 3rd February I decided to send a tweet or two to Stephen Fry asking him if he would tweet about saving Bletchley Park, I went to bed afterwards and forgot all about it. At 10am the next morning I got an email saying that I had received a direct message from Stephen Fry. He said that he had sent out a tweet to all his followers! I checked Twitter to find this: #bpark You might want to sign the Save Bletchley Park petition. Read @ Dr_Black 's reasons why on http://is.gd/ikEh - BP won us the war!

stephenfry Stephen Fry This may not seem like a big thing for the campaign, but believe me, it's massive! Stephen then had about 116 000 followers on Twitter, he now has 222 690. Twitter has been incredibly powerful in terms of spreading the word. Well, guess what happened? Everything went crazy! I had people emailing me from all over the world, and many people retweeted Stephen's original tweet which meant that even more people got to hear about the situation that Bletchley Park finds itself in. I had 8000 hits on my blog and the petition to save Bletchley Park on the No. 10 Downing Street site went up by over 1000 signatures. A very unusual day :)

I went to most retweeted person of the day, with Stephen Fry in second place. See these screen shots taken on the day, to see what happened :)

and Bletchley Park started trending seriously. Thank you so much Stephen Fry and thank you so much Twitterers, you are really helping to save Bletchley Park. back to top

Monday, 02 February 2009 Bletchley Park Goldmine Met up with a fabulous person yesterday, his name is Brian Oakley. Brian is a CBE, was BCS President in 1988 and received an honorary doctorate from the University of Essex. He is best known as the Chairman of the committee that was responsible for implementing the government program of fifth generation computing research that followed the Alvey report in the 1980s. I first met Brian when he showed Fran Allen, Caroline Wardle, Phyllis Starkey MP and me around Bletchley Park last September. Brian was an absolutely fantastic guide, his knowledge of BP is absolutely immense and he is completely committed to saving Bletchley Park and has been for some time. Brian has an equally amazing wife, Marion, who made us the best cake I have ever tasted in my life, no joke , it really was (please don't tell my friend Ilaria, because up until now, her cakes were the best ;-)) I had been meaning to get in touch with Brian since last September and embarassingly have only just got around to it. Anyway, we had a really wonderful afternoon together discussing Bletchley Park amongst many other things, Brian and Marion have four children and ten grandchildren who sound absolutely wonderful too! Brian has produced many documents relating to Bletchley Park over the years including a database of people who worked there and a month by month account of what happened at BP during WW2. I'm hoping that we may be able to get some of the amazing information that he has spent many years compiling online. Watch this space for details...... BTW: I found this interesting link whilst Googling Brian: The 360/195 is dead back to top

Wednesday, 28 January 2009 Blogging 4 Bletchley Had a really enjoyable evening this evening talking to the Extreme Tuesday club about being a geek and saving Bletchley Park. Many thanks to the wonderful Jason Gorman for coming up with the Blogging 4 Bletchley idea and then organising it. I hadn't really thought that much about being a geek before, but the signs were there for me from an early age: not many friends and used to spend all my pocket money on maths textbooks ;-) Hmmm. Anyway, as I was saying, there were some great people in the audience with some good questions and ideas and a really interesting discussion afterwards. I'm looking forward to many great things from the blogging/tweeting community in terms of Bletchley Park. They are a force to be reckoned with. If you have a blog, please do start Blogging 4 Bletchley: read all about Bletchley Park and start telling people why you think it should be saved, and of course do get in touch if you want any more information. back to top

Friday, 23 January 2009 Remember Tommy Flowers BBC Pods and Blogs aka Jamillah Knowles came along with us last week when we visited Bletchley Park. Jamillah has produced a fabulous podcast from Captain Jerry Roberts talk at UCL and those of us who were at BP last week. Listen to it from the BBC Pods and Blogs page One of the students who was at Captain Jerry Roberts talk last week has blogged about it, which led me to find many others who have blogged about Bletchley Park. Many people really care about the place and for good reason. If you haven't signed the 10 Downing Street petition to save BP already, please do so now. back to top

Sunday, 18 January 2009 New Hope for Bletchley Park What a fabulous day! I went to Bletchley Park last Wednesday with Mike Atherton, Jamillah Knowles and Christian Payne. They are better known to those who use Twitter as @Sizemore, @Jemimah_Knight and @Documentally. First we had a meeting with Simon Greenish: Director of Bletchley Park and Kelsey Griffin: Director of Operations at BP. L to R Christian, Mike, Kelsey, Sue

A video clip shot by Christian, shows us introducing ourselves and Simon talking about BP. We then had a grand tour led by Kelsey, taking in the Mansion House, Station X (well almost, it was locked, but we stood outside ;-)). We then went to the BP Post Office and Toy Museum. I was amazed to see a book that I read when I was six years old in the Toy Museum...made me feel rather old! Apart from that it was fabulous ;-) very evocative with something there for everyone to have a look at. That's the first time I've been in there and actually, I can't wait to go back and have a better look. We met the people who set up and run the Toy Museum who were really lovely and also I was introduced by them to the Director of the Bethnal Park Toy Museum as she just happened to be visiting. Next we had a look at the vintage cars and the boat museum, and then moved on to the cottages where some of the top code breakers worked. Next was the National Museum of Computing (NMOC) which is of course Mecca for a geek like me. I could spend all day in there. Do have a look at the photographs taken by Mike, Christian and Jamillah in the new Flickr group of all of these parts of BP, they must have taken about 1000 photographs between them! Bletchley Park have set up a Flickr group so that anyone with photos of BP can put them online for all to enjoy, another great idea from the group :-) BP also now have a prescence on Twitter: you can follow updates about what they are doing by following @bletchleypark. From the NMOC we went to have a look at the furnace where all of the paper used for writing down the codes/decrypts etc. was burnt every day, as Christian said "like the forerunner of the modern day shredder". It felt like a very symbolic place to me because I can just imagine the people working there assigned to the job walking down there every night with the paper used that day, burning it in the furnace (on land unfortunately no longer owned by BP) and there already being messages coming through which needed to be deciphered for the next day. The position of the wheels on the Enigma or Lorenz machines was changed every day and the code cracked afresh each day. Next was the Bombe rebuild, and the exhibits in that block, finishing up in the BP shop which has many interesting and varied products for sale, better than your average gift shop. We ended with Jemimah interviewing us for her BBC Pods and Blogs spot. As she interviewed Mike and Christian I walked over to the lake and spent 10 minutes thinking about all of the people that worked at BP, most sadly no longer with us :-( The 10 minutes reflection really made me think that BP should become a living museum, just imagine if when you visit you really get a sense of what it was like there during WWII. You arrive at the entrance and are questioned by a sentry and not allowed in until you show the correct ID, there are people sitting by the lake who will talk to you about their jobs running the Bombe and Colossus machines, someone in the role of Alan Turing walking or riding aorund on his bicycle, happy to answer questions about his involvement and life there. How cool would that be for kids visiting? Well, and adults too of course. It was an absolutely fabulous day, and very exciting to see and hear about all of the things that Mike, Christian and Jemimah know that BP can use to help get a whole new audience involved with BP. As I had hoped, it's not because people don't care that BP is not properly funded, although of course that is true for some. I think it is because not enough of the people that care know the reality of the situation. I left with a real sense of hope that we had taken a massive step forward with the campaign. Mike and Christian are fantastic, they are wonderful people that really care about the important things in life, I feel very honoured to have met them and spent a day with them. The same goes for Jemimah. None of them had to be there, they very kindly came along to see what was going on and to see if they could help out. I believe that their input will over the next few months make a dramatic difference to Bletchley Park, and look forward to see how their influence and input plays out. Do keep checking back here to see what progress has been made and do have a look at www.twitter.com and follow @bletchleypark, you'll be glad that you did. back to top

Tuesday, 13 January 2009 Adolf Hitler, Fuhrer Attended an absolutely fascinating talk today by Captain Jerry Roberts at University College London. I was accompanied by Mike Sizemore, Jemimah Knight and my lovely friend Judy Corbalis. Captain Jerry Roberts shows us one of the valves used by Tommy Flowers when building Colossus Jerry is an amazing speaker. He told us many stories about his time at Bletchley Park including the time when he deciphered and translated a message that ended with the signature: 'Adolf Hitler, Fuhrer'. How incredible must that have been? Amazing. Jerry told us the story of Tommy Flowers who invented the first computer at Bletchley Park: Colossus, Bill Tutte who cracked Tunny and of course Alan Turing. It was a fabulous afternoon shared by German and History students from UCL who sat quietly with their mouths open throughout the whole talk. We were all hanging on Jerry's every word....with good reason. I'm looking forward to the next talk Jerry gives in March, again at UCL. Many thanks to Professor Suzanne Kord from UCL for organising the talk for her students and very kindly allowing us to attend. Now to tomorrow, I'm so excited as I'm off to Bletchley Park again. This time with Mike and Jemimah and also Christian, all better known to those on Twitter as @Sizemore, @Jemimah_Knight and @Documentally. Mike got in touch with me last week after following a link from my Twitter profile to this blog and then reading about the campaign to get Bletchley Park properly funded. He told me that both he and Christian who are both social media gurus, really want to do something about the lack of funding for Bletchley Park. They have done an amazing job already over the last couple of days of promoting the cause, and I think that what they are going to do tomorrow when we are at BP is going to make a massive difference. I can't wait to see how tomorrow goes.....watch this space.... back to top

Monday, 08 December 2008 Mavis Batey on CBS news Fabulous coverage of Bletchley Park on US TV Channel CBS news today: WWII Code Breaking Compound Crumbles

Mavis Batey is interviewed by CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar about codebreaking, and Simon Greenish the Director of Bletchley Park shows us the inside of one of the huts, something I have not seen before. Simon Greenish says that it has been a record year for visitors this year with 70 000 regular visitors plus 5 000 schoolchildren. With all the publicity that Bletchley Park is getting I'm sure that numbers will keep increasing :-) back to top

Sunday, 16 November 2008 A great lunch and plans for the future Was invited to Jerry and Mei Roberts' place for lunch and to meet Jack Copeland author of the book 'Colossus'. Although I haven't read the whole book (I'm ashamed to say) I have dipped in and out of it, it is an absolutely fascinating read and highly recommended. Jack and Jerry very kindly signed my copy :-) After introductions were over we had a good chat about BP. Jerry is absolutely amazing, he led one of the shifts in the testery at BP during WWII and at 80+ is still going strong. Jack has amazing knowledge of what happened at BP and codebreaking from both a theoretical and historical point of view. We had a very enjoyable conversation and then started thinking up ideas for ways to raise funding and awareness for/of BP. I wrote up a list of exciting ideas and actions. Watch this space for progress....... back to top

Thursday, 06 November 2008 Exciting news! Exciting news this morning, Bletchley Park have received a £330 000 grant from English Heritage which will be used to undertake urgent repairs to the roof of the mansion house. Discussions are also in progress regarding a further £600 000 from English Heritage over the next three years. This is fabulous news and exactly the type of funding for which we have been campaigning. Simon Greenish, Director of Bletchley Park says 'I think this has come out of the publicity this year with your contribution being a major factor.' :-) More details are on the BBC website this morning: New lifeline for Bletchley Park and in today's Times newspaper where our letter appeared last July: Government grant to save Bletchley Park The news is starting to be picked up across the media: Bletchley Park recieves £330 000 English Heritage grant Bucks Free Press 6th November 2008 Bletchley Park gets £330k lifeline The Register 6th November 2008 Thanks everyone so much for your support, this is great news, and hopefully just the beginning of substantial funding for BP. Simon Greenish, Director of Bletchley Park with Sir Francis and Dr Simon Thurley, Chief Executive of English Heritage at Bletchley Park this morning The story is linked from the BBC homepage, showing how important they think it is: and it is front of the BBC Technology page today: back to top

Tuesday, 04 November 2008 Media update Received a call from Jerry Roberts to say that the BBC are coming back to interview today him along with Jack Copeland, author of the book Colossus. This is great news as the more stories from BP that are broadcast the more people in general will realise what a massive role it played in the shortening and winning of WWII. Hopefully then more people will realise the importance of BP and join the campaign to save it for posterity. Jerry said that the BBC are going to run a program about Tommy Flowers, the man who designed Colossus. The campaign and awareness of BP seem to be gaining critical mass, as time goes on more and more people seem to be coming on board :-) back to top

Friday, 19 September 2008 Fran Allen visits Bletchley Park Another exciting day. Fran Allen: the only female Turing award winner is in the UK to speak at a conference and wants to go to see Bletchley Park. Professor Caroline Wardle from Queen Mary College and I have organised a trip for today. Joining us at BP are Phyllis Starkey the local MP for Bletchley and Mavis Batey one of the few surviving codebreakers. Mavis (L) tells Fran (R) and the group all about her experience working at Bletchley Park. We had a fabulous day guided around by Brian Oakley whose knowledge of BP was amazing. From L to R: Brian Oakley, Caroline Wardle, Fran Allen, Phyllis Starkey MP, Sue Black, Frank Carter From L to R: Caroline Wardle, John Harper, Phyllis Starkey MP, Fran Allen, Sue Black, Brian Oakley, Frank Carter. John Harper and his team have rebuilt the Bombe. back to top

Tuesday, 09 September 2008 Money for Bletchley Park Great news! IBM and PGP corporation have donated money to The National Museum of Computing at BP :-) Was invited to the press event at BP along with some of the Professors of Computing who signed our letter to the Times. Hopefully other companies will now follow suit... back to top

Sunday, 24 August 2008 Captain Jerry Roberts Was invited to see Captain Jerry Roberts and his wife Mei for a chat about BP. They made me and my daughter Leah extremely welcome, and we talked for at least two hours about BP and Jerry's involvement there. Jerry was a shift leader, linguist and senior codebreaker in the testery at BP, an extremely important position. Jerry said that he had decided to dedicate the rest of his life to highlighting the importance of BP and the people that worked there. I resolved to help find someone to help him to write about his experiences at BP and to try to get some media interest in him and the story he has to tell. After only having met 2 hours before we parted firm friends. I am so lucky to have met or talked to some really incredible people through my campaign. back to top

Thursday, 24 July 2008 Bletchley Park hits the news Wow! What a day. I woke up at 4.30am stressed with the thought that I was going to be interviewed live on BBC News 24 later that day. I did an interview with Radio Five live at about 7.50am and then made my way up to Westminster to the BBC studios. On arrival I did my first ever studio radio interview with the BBC World Service and then got myself ready for a live TV interview. I sat waiting to go on opposite Feargal Sharkey from the Undertones. He sang one of the greatest songs of my teenage years: Teenage Kicks, I still feel excited by it every time I hear it, even now. I wanted to tell him that but was so nervous that I couldn't remember the name of the song! Feargal was then called to go on and I actually started calming down a bit. After about 10 minutes it was my turn and I went through and did the interview. I decided when miked up and sitting in the chair that I was going to enjoy it, because if I was stressed I would look stressed on TV. I think it worked, although when I came out I had no idea what I had said. I had lunch with Andy Clark who is Chair of Trustees of The National Museum of Computing (TNMOC) at Bletchley Park. We had a really interesting discussion and I found out more about the recent history of Bletchley Park and why it is in the state that it is now. In the afternoon I did another Radio interview with BBC Radio Wales. This time they had a female veteran being interviewed with me, she was really interesting and great fun. I am really humbled when I talk to those that worked there. Their work, which was very hard work over several years, sometimes seven days per week, contributed to the freedom that I and my family and friends enjoy today. back to top

Thursday, 24 July 2008 A letter in the Times Saving the heritage of Bletchley Park We cannot let Bletchley go to rack and ruin

Sir, The work undertaken at Bletchley Park during the Second World War in breaking German wartime codes played a significant part in winning that war and securing our future. The work included the decryption of messages enciphered on the German Enigma machines and the breaking of the German “Fish” High Command teleprinter ciphers. Bletchley Park also played a significant role 65 years ago in the design and development of Colossus, one of the world’s first programmable electronic computers. It is therefore fitting that the world’s first purpose-built computer centre should be home to the National Museum of Computing.



Over the years, Bletchley Park has survived building redevelopment (1938), an air raid (1940), the destruction of sensitive material and information (post-1945) and more recently (1991), a second attempt at demolition and redevelopment. That Bletchley Park has survived to the present day is due to the foresight of Milton Keynes Borough Council, which declared the park a conservation area in February 1992, and the formation of the Bletchley Park Trust just three days later.



The trust currently runs this gem charitably, receiving no external funding. Although there has recently been some progress in generating income, without fundamental support Bletchley Park is still under threat, this time from the ravages of age and a lack of investment. Many of the huts where the codebreaking occurred are in a terrible state of disrepair.



As a nation, we cannot allow this crucial and unique piece of both British and world heritage to be neglected in this way. The future of the site, buildings, resources and equipment at Bletchley Park must be preserved for future generations by providing secure long-term financial backing. Is it too much to ask that Bletchley Park be provided with the same financial stability as some of our other great museums such as the Imperial War Museum, the Science Museum and the Natural History Museum?



The Sir, The work undertaken at Bletchley Park during the Second World War in breaking German wartime codes played a significant part in winning that war and securing our future. The work included the decryption of messages enciphered on the German Enigma machines and the breaking of the German “Fish” High Command teleprinter ciphers. Bletchley Park also played a significant role 65 years ago in the design and development of Colossus, one of the world’s first programmable electronic computers. It is therefore fitting that the world’s first purpose-built computer centre should be home to the National Museum of Computing.Over the years, Bletchley Park has survived building redevelopment (1938), an air raid (1940), the destruction of sensitive material and information (post-1945) and more recently (1991), a second attempt at demolition and redevelopment. That Bletchley Park has survived to the present day is due to the foresight of Milton Keynes Borough Council, which declared the park a conservation area in February 1992, and the formation of the Bletchley Park Trust just three days later.The trust currently runs this gem charitably, receiving no external funding. Although there has recently been some progress in generating income, without fundamental support Bletchley Park is still under threat, this time from the ravages of age and a lack of investment. Many of the huts where the codebreaking occurred are in a terrible state of disrepair.As a nation, we cannot allow this crucial and unique piece of both British and world heritage to be neglected in this way. The future of the site, buildings, resources and equipment at Bletchley Park must be preserved for future generations by providing secure long-term financial backing. Is it too much to ask that Bletchley Park be provided with the same financial stability as some of our other great museums such as the Imperial War Museum, the Science Museum and the Natural History Museum?The letter along with signatories is on the Times website back to top

Wednesday, 23 July 2008 A busy and exciting week Here is my email to CPHC:

Dear all,



It has been a very busy and exciting week :-)



I was interviewed at Bletchley Park on Monday by Rory Cellan Jones, the interview will be on the Today Programme on Radio 4 tomorrow morning and possibly on BBC 1pm and 6pm news depending on what else happens tomorrow. I am also going to be on Radio Five Live at 6.50am tomorrow morning (ouch!) and BBC news 24 at 11.30am.



The letter that my colleague John Turner very kindly wrote will be in the Times tomorrow and is already on their website. I was asked to choose 5-6 names from the 97 to put in the newspaper so have chosen those that I am hoping will have most resonance with the general public, many thanks to those six people. All signatories names are included on the Times website, but unfortunately, apart from the six aforementioned, they are there without titles or affilations, apologies for that, I have asked the Times to rectify this, so maybe they will change it.



http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/letters/article4385384.ece



I really hope that we have included everyone that emailed us in the list, if not my apologies, it has been really hectic over the last few days. Also apologies to Professor Lawrence Paulson, for some reason the 'Professor' has disappeared from your 'signature'.



Thank you all so much for your support for the campaign, it has been absolutely overwhelming, and I think that because of your support we may now actually get somewhere with this....and something fundamental may happen. I'm really becoming quite confident that we do now have a good chance of getting some serious funding :-)



Please talk to everyone you know who may be interested in the campaign, I'm hoping to appeal to the general public tomorrow to raise awareness amongst those that know very little about Bletchley Park, to get them onboard, to help them to realise that this is part of our heritage, all of us. We need to preserve Bletchley Park so that our children and grandchildren know and understand about the massive effort put into cracking the codes and winning WW2 and also the history of computing in this country.



I hope that I can get the message over well tomorrow, thanks again so much for your support everyone, you have really made a difference.



Best regards



Sue back to top

Monday, 21 July 2008 An exciting phone call Was working at home planning to meet up with Professor Caroline Wardle from Queen Mary College for a working lunch to discuss a trip to Bletchley Park for Fran Allan: the only female Turing award winner who had taught Caroline at University in the States. Got a call from Rory Cellan-Jones saying that he was going up to BP to shoot some film and record something for the radio, would I be interested in being interviewed at BP for radio and possibly a piece for TV too? Was I interested?! Called Caroline who kindly agreed to meet me earlier than planned and then got the train up to BP. Was interviewed there by Rory for TV and radio. I had thought I would be nervous, but actually I wasn't. As I stood looking at the huts I just felt really annoyed that nothing was being done to save them. back to top

Friday, 18 July 2008 The BBC are interested! To my great surprise got a call from Rory Cellan-Jones and Mark Ward at the BBC. Had a good chat with them, they were both lovely and really interested in doing a piece about BP. Fabulous! They suggested that the Letter to the Times from CPHC should go in next Thursday, they could not tell me why it had to be next Thursday.....if they did they would have to shoot me ;-) Exciting stuff. I agree that the letter can go in next Thursday. back to top

Tuesday, 15 July 2008 Talk to the BBC After getting such a great response from the Council for Professors and Heads of Computing to the letter which will appear in the Times sometime soon I decided to email my contacts in the media to see if they were interested in picking up the story. I emailed Rory Cellan-Jones at the BBC amongst others and amazingly he got back to me almost straight away! I chatted to Rory about BP and why we had to do something now to save it, I didn't feel that he was that interested... back to top

Monday, 14 July 2008 The Council for Professors and Heads of Computing Emailed the The Council for Professors and Heads of Computing: From: Dr Sue Black

Sent: 14 July 2008 17:51

To: CPHC

Subject: Saving Bletchley Park



Dear all,



Many thanks to the very many of you who along with me signed the Bletchley Park petition recently. As Simon Greenish, the Director of Bletchley Park pointed out to me, the Bletchley Park petition now ranks higher on the popularity list than the petition asking for a knighthood for Bruce Forsyth. Excellent news, well done everyone ;-)



This email is a bid to take the campaign one step further. I went to Bletchley Park this month taking in a wonderful guided tour of the site. Whilst absolutely amazed by the history and the interesting and exciting stories of the fabulous work that went on there during WWII I was horrified to see the state of some of the huts where the codebreaking took place. One hut in particular is falling apart and has a blue tarpaulin nailed over one end (small photo attached), to be honest I found it quite distressing.



I came home determined to do more. So, I am appealing to you again to help me continue with the campaign to save Bletchley Park.



Pasted below this email is a letter drafted by John Turner, a colleague of mine at the University of Westminster, which I would like you to read and 'sign' if you agree by replying to this email with your name and affiliation. We will send the letter along with signatories to the Times newspaper in approximately ten days time. If you know of any computing pioneers or others whose signatures you think may add weight to the campaign please do feel free to forward this request.



Apologies for taking up your time with another email on this subject, but I believe that, not only is this a cause worth fighting for, but also that time is of the essence, a hut from the 1940s covered in a tarpaulin is not going to last for ever.



Best regards



Sue back to top