The Manor House at Bletchley Park where the code breaker bosses worked.
A captured World War Two Enigma machine used in the field or at sea to decipher messages from German commanders.
A paper tape perforator for encoding diplomatic radio transmissions.
A mockup of a German field radio station assembled from captured gear in the museum at Bletchley.
Hut One on the Bletchley campus.
Various receiving and transmitting gear in the Bletchley collection housed in Hut One.
Automatic Morse transmission gear.
A typical rack of radio gear as might have been installed in a British embassy during the 1960's, in the Bletchley collection housed in Hut One.
A typical rack of radio gear as might have been installed in a British embassy during the 1970's, in the Bletchley collection housed in Hut One.
A typical rack of radio gear as might have been installed in a British embassy during the 1960's, in the Bletchley collection housed in Hut One. This is, I believe, a complete Racal made setup.
War time radio equipment as would have been found in British homes on display at Bletchley Park.
The British National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park, housed in an old code breakers' hut.
This is Colossus, the first electronic digital computer, that was used to crack the Enigma codes. It has been rebuilt and restored to working condtition by talented volunteers, many of whom worked in the cryptographic corps.
Part of the collection of ham gear at the Bletchley Park ham radio station.