I am watching the
first flurry of 2013 snow spin down outside the winter and very glad that we
have central heating. And that the dog is with my step daughter and is not
pleading to go out, regardless of the temperature or conditions outside.
I am reminded
also, of the 108 year old lady who died in our village recently, and her
stories of how, as a child, she was sent up into the south Shropshire hills to
collect blaeberries (blueberries or bilberries to the southerners around
here) - if she didn’t collect enough,
she didn’t get her winter shoes. But
whatever the state of her footwear, she still walked the five miles down ‘Muddy
Lane’ and over the hill to school in the neighbouring village every morning and
back again in the evening. The lane was a river during the recent floods, and
most mornings, it’s a wellie-sucking nightmare of freezing, slushy mud.
Every morning I
walk there, I think of Elsie, and am glad of modern footwear, and the car drive
with my father that took me to school in the morning. Granted it was a good thirty eight miles, but
we were warm and dry and the train, then train, then bus ride home in the
evenings wasn’t nearly as bad as I imagined at the time. The waiting at freezing bus stops was nothing
compared to trudging through freezing mud.
Bill Tutte (photo from Wikipedia) |
All of which
leads me to WT (Bill) Tutte, a Suffolk
lad, son William John senior (can we hope that one day, men are going to stop
naming their sons after themselves?) of an estate gardner and Annie Tutte, née
Newell, a cook and housekeeper. The
family moved around in his youth, but when he was five, they moved to Cheveley,
a village just outside Newmarket, while his father took up a position at the
Rutland Arms Hotel in the town. Bill was
a bright lad at primary school and won a scholarship to Cambridge and County
Day School – which was twelve miles away.
Several of his biographies tell that he had to ‘make his own way’ to the
school (and back) daily; none of them has ever enlightened me as to how he achieved
this, but I imagine it makes Elsie’s trudge over the Clee hill pale by
comparison: I used to live in the next village along to Cheveley and one of my
main clients when I was a young stud vet was the Chevely Park stud: it’s a
beautiful place, but there’s not a lot between Newmarket and the Urals when the
wind is easterly and it can be bitterly cold.
Nevertheless, the
young Bill went on to read Chemistry at Trinity College, Cambridge, although
his interest in mathematics was such that he published a paper with four
friends on the problem of ‘Squaring the
Square’ (For those with a mathematical bent, the problem was described in the
book ‘The Canterbury puzzle and other tales’ and involves decomposing a
rectangle into squares, each with sides of different integer lengths. Tutte and his three friends described the
rectangle as a graph and the graph as a circuit with resistors connected to
their top and bottom edges and then described the flow of an electrical current
through the graph-circuit.
Bill was studying
for a post-graduate degree in Chemistry when the Second World War broke out and
it became imperative to decipher the Axis military communications. The powers that be were coming round to the
idea that they needed mathematicians more than the linguists who had broken
previous ciphers and soon Bletchley Park sent out a quiet word to senior
academics in Oxford and Cambridge to keep an eye out for young men
(exclusively) of a mathematical bent who might be prepared to enlist in the
secret never-to-be-spoken world of the cryptanalysts.
Originally
rejected by Alan Turing’s team, Bill was ultimately recruited by John Tiltman
who headed the research station, and came to Bletchley Park in January 1941. Soon after, he was handed a copy of the newly
intercepted LORENZ teleprinter (‘Geheimschreiber’) cipher to see what he could
make of it. Considerably more complex than the ENIGMA ciphers, the LORENZ code
had so far proved entirely intractable.
Given that it was the code used by the Nazi military command to
distribute comments, orders of battle and progress updates to and from their
headquarters in Berlin, cracking it was vital to the Allied war effort.
Alan Turing and
the team that broke the Enigma codes had the advantage of a real machine to
examine and a background of Polish work that had contributed in a large part to
the early cryptanalysis.
Bill’s team never
had any access to a Geheimschreiber machine and had to achieve the complete
analysis based on an understanding of German military language and sheer raw statistics.
Bill’s colleague,
Captain Jerry Roberts, described him a spending hours sitting at his desk,
staring into space. “I used to wonder if he was doing anything, but my goodness
he was. Breaking [it] was a most
extraordinary achievement.”
Photograph of Geheimschreiber from Wikipedia |
The breakthrough
came in August of 1941 when a German
operator made the fundamental error of sending the same message twice in a row,
but used an abbreviation for an early word, thus allowing the cryptanalysts
some insight into its nature. It still
took four months, further ‘depth’ transmissions, an increase in the accuracy of
the ‘Y’ listening stations and many hours of advanced statistical analysis, but
Bill Tutte lead the team that unlocked the mathematics of the cipher and thus
was able to describe the twelve-wheel machine that was creating it.
It became swiftly
clear that without mistakes on the part of the enemy operators, no transmission
would be deciphered, and that four months from transmission to reading was too
long. This is where Tommy Flowers comes
into the story of the first computer.
Bill Tutte developed the statistics, but Tommy Flowers, an east end lad
who had progressed through the GPO’s engineer training scheme and had worked
with Alan Turing on devising an electro-mechanical method of breaking the
Enigma ciphers.
Brought in to
work on the Lorenz ciphers, Tommy devised and built the COLOSSUS: the first
fully electronic computer. He did it
against the overwhelming theories of those around him (who resented his use of
thermionic valves) and funded the first Colossus largely on his own. Having proved itself, ten models were commissioned,
each one more complex than its predecessor and an eleventh was in production
when the war ended. Capable of the
(then) astonishing speed of 2000 calculations per second, each involving up to
100 Boolean calculations on 5 separate streams.
The Colossus machine (photo from Wikipedia) |
Much of the
post-statistical analysis had to be done by hand and the operators – many of
whom were young women with a flair for mathematics became adept at reading the
results and reconfiguring the machine to test for other analyses so that the
cryptanalysis moved more swiftly.
The first
real-time use of Colossus came in the battle of Kursk in which Stalin was not
only informed of the Nazi intent to attack, but given the entire order of
battle verbatim. The subsequent defeat of Hitler’s troops was a crucial turning
point in the war on the eastern front.
By the closing
stages of the war, the team at Bletchley was able to hand General Eisenhower a
print out of Hitler’s response to the preparations for D-Day, thus triggering
the final command to commit the troops as planned.
Bill Tutte lecturing in Canada (Photo from Wikipedia) |
Bill Tutte, the
boy who made his own way twelve miles to school and back each day, was never
decorated for his work in Bletchley Park although others since have described
it as ‘the greatest intellectual achievement of the twentieth century’. Never the less, he was elected a Fellow of
the Royal Society and later, having attained his PhD at Cambridge and moved to
Canada, he was made an Officer of Canada.
His work was classified for many years, but, unlike many at Bletchley,
he lived long enough to be able to talk about it. His lecture ‘FISH and I’ makes fascinating
and inspiring reading.
Bill Tutte died
in 2002 an acknowledged hero, but one whose name deserves far more widespread
recognition.
Thank you - I didn't know about him. What a fine-looking machine Colossus is, with his smart female attendants - like a giant number loom!
ReplyDeleteA fascinating post. Makes my brain (not to mention well-shod feet) hurt!
ReplyDeleteThere were so many cleaver people.
ReplyDeleteTalked to lady only yesterday whose mother worked in Bletchly, she now has dementia and is in a secure home. They have a touch pad code to get out and every week my friend gets a call saying her mum is missing again, she keeps breaking the code to get out. The are now installing a code and swipe card to slow her down.
Ruan - that's so, so moving...so many supremely intelligent young women worked at Bletchely... and clearly even now, their brains still work...
ReplyDeletethank you
manda
Great post, thank you. There's a wonderful new memorial to him up now in Newmarket, by artist Harry Gray. Tutte's face appears through the perforations on metal sheets inspired by the coding sheets he worked with.
ReplyDelete