Government's top code-breakers left stumped by wartime carrier pigeon's secret note appeal for public's help to decipher message



It was discovered by David Martin, 74, in the chimney of his Surrey home in August

Expert historians at GCHQ have been unable to crack the code

Truth of the secret message may never be known

It's left the Government's top code breakers stumped - but maybe can you decipher the secret message sent by British soldiers during World War Two?

The unopened scroll was found attached to the remains of a carrier pigeon at house in Surrey in August.

It is believed the bird swooped down on the chimney for a rest during its long journey from Nazi-occupied France.

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Shock: David Martin with the remains of a carrier pigeon which he discovered behind his fireplace But sadly, the brave 'spy' pigeon then fell off its perch and died with the vital message still wrapped to its leg. Expert hictorians at GCHQ, who have been trying to decipher the code for weeks unsuccessfully, say it may never be cracked. They are now turning the mystery over to the public in the hope that someone may know the secret to unlock the mystery. The message, hidden in a red cylinder, lay undiscovered in the chimney for around 70 years until the home’s current owner David Martin decided to restore the fireplace. ‘The chimney was full of twigs and rubbish,’ he said. ‘We were stunned by how much came out. Then I started finding bits of a dead pigeon. We thought it might be a racing pigeon until we spotted the red capsule.’ The former probation officer and his wife Anne, both 74, unscrewed the capsule and found a hand-written message inside on a ‘cigarette paper thin’ piece of paper. It was sent to code breakers at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, the intelligence centre where work to crack the Nazi Enigma code shortened the war by years, and to their modern-day counterparts at GCHQ in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, who also tried to decipher it.



History: Historians believe the message, (left) which was written by a Sergeant W. Stott, will provide unique insight into the war. It was discovered rolled up in the red capsule attached to the pigeon (right) Complex: The message contains 27 codes, each made up of combinations of five numbers and letters

The bird could have been on its way to wartime decoding HQ Bletchley Park, in Buckinghamshire (pictured). Code-crackers have been frantically trying to decipher the message, which never reached its intended recipient

THE FEATHERED ARMY AND THEIR SECRET MILITARY MESSAGES

Carrier pigeons have been used for centuries and were used in both world wars to convey military messages.

They can reach speeds of 80mph and distances of 700 miles.

The RAF trained 250,000 birds in World War II, forming the National Pigeon Service.

The were so relied upon that the government even introduced a special RAF squadron to cull falcons and hawks who attacked them. The birds would be dropped into Nazi occupied Europe using mini parachutes. They were then picked up and secret messages were inserted into capsules on their legs. The birds would then fly hundreds of miles back home. When they landed, wires in the coop would sound a bell or buzzer and a soldier of the Signal Corps would know a message had arrived. He would go to the coop, remove the message from the canister, and send it to its destination by telegraph, field phone, or personal messenger. Thirty two pigeons were even decorated with the Dicken Medal during the war years - the animal equivalent of the Victoria Cross.

Among them was Commando - a pigeon who carried out more than ninety missions during the war.

Another was Kenley Lass who was the first bird to deliver intelligence from an agent in enemy-occupied France in October 1940.

Dutch Coast delivered an SOS message from a ditched aircrew 288 miles in 7.5 hours in 1942.



Mr Martin said: 'I always understood there was no code that couldn't be cracked. I am beginning to think this message contains highly-sensitive orders.'

Experts from UK intelligence agency GCHQ said the message, which has 27 five-letter code groups, is impossible to crack without its codebook.

They were also left stumped by missing details, such as the date of the message and the identities of the sender, 'Sjt W Stot', and the recipient, 'X02'.

A spokesman said: 'Although it is disappointing that we cannot yet read the message brought back by a brave carrier pigeon, it is a tribute to the skills of the wartime code-makers that, despite working under severe pressure, they devised a code that was indecipherable both then and now.'

A GCHQ historian told the BBC help from the public is the best hope for any breakthrough.



'There are still quite a lot of people alive who worked in communications centres during the war and who might have some knowledge about this and it would be very interesting if anyone did have information if they could put it in the pot and we could see if we could get any further with it,' he said.



Some 250,000 pigeons were deployed in the Second World War. Able to fly at a mile a minute, they carried messages from behind enemy lines and, like a forerunner of the ‘black box’, accompanied RAF bomber crews in case they crashed.

Experts say the red capsule Mr Martin found is the type used by the Special Operations Executive. Their human agents undertook sabotage missions such as blowing up trains, bridges and factories in German-occupied territory.

The message was written by a Sergeant W Stott and contains columns of groups of five letters. It is thought that its intended recipient, ‘X02’, is code for Bomber Command.

One theory is that the message may have been requesting a bombing raid somewhere. Another is that the pigeon was bound for Field Marshal Montgomery’s HQ in Reigate, Surrey, from where he planned the D-Day landings.

Homing pigeons were taken on the D-Day invasion and released by Allied Forces to keep generals back on English shores updated on the operation.

Some pigeons were based at Bletchley Park, which is now a museum. But Colin Hill, curator of its permanent ‘Pigeons at War’ exhibition, said all of the pigeon messages in its archives are in long-hand, not code.

‘The message Mr Martin found must be highly top secret,’ Mr Hill said. ‘The aluminium ring found on the bird’s leg tells us it was born in 1940, and we know it’s an Allied Forces pigeon because of the red capsule it was carrying, but that’s all we know.’

En route: Experts believe the pigeon and coded message may have been flying back from Nazi Germany to General Montgomery Headquarters in Reigate, Surrey. General Montgomery is pictured in 1944