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A Bletchley Park codebreaker who “inspired women in the Army for decades” has died at the age of 101. Charlotte “Betty” Webb, one of the last surviving codebreakers from crucial Second ...
Bletchley Park collaborated with the EFL League Two team on the design, which referenced the circular keys on the Enigma machine - a typewriter-like device used by Germany to encode military messages.
Charlotte “Betty” Webb MBE, who was one of the last surviving codebreakers from Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, died on Monday, the Women’s Royal Army Corps Association said.
She worked at Bletchley's naval section between 1942 and 1945. Another code breaker, Mavis Batey, spoke to CBS News in 2008, when she was 87, about working at Bletchley Park.
On Thursday, the UK government announced that Bletchley Park, which it referred to as "one of the birthplaces of computer science", will host the UK AI Safety Summit on November 1-2.