Dilly: The Man Who Broke Enigma

Dilly: The Man Who Broke Enigma book cover

Dilly: The Man Who Broke Enigma

Author(s): Mavis Batey (Author)

  • Publisher: Dialogue
  • Publication Date: 15 Sept. 2009
  • Edition: First Edition
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 256 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1906447012
  • ISBN-13: 9781906447014

Book Description

Dilly is the little known story of the man who did more than anyone else to break the German Enigma code, an event key to the allies ultimate victory in the Second World War Alfred Dillwyn Knox, known as Dilly, was Britain s leading wartime codebreaker, a famously eccentric and temperamental genius who cracked German ciphers in both wars. The son of a famous religious scholar, Knox worked in the Admiralty s Room 40 codebreaking operation during the First World War, breaking the German Admiral s Flag Code, and between the wars he deciphered the text of the Herodas papyri and broke the Enigma cipher machine used by Franco s royalist forces in the Spanish Civil War. During the Second World War Knox became Britain s chief cryptographer, working in a cottage at the world-famous Bletchley Park assisted only by his girls , the best of the young female codebreakers available to him. Knox s work would eventually provide the solution to German secret service Enigma cipher, playing a key part in the Double-Cross deception system which ensured the success of the 1944 D-Day landings. Knox himself, however, never saw the triumph, sadly dying of cancer in 1943.

Editorial Reviews

From the Author

Mavis Batey, on why she wrote Dilly:

Normally an obituary in The Times would provide a framework for a biography of an important person in any given field, but that simply wasn’t true of the one written for my boss at the British wartime codebreaking base at Bletchley Park. This was the wonderfully eccentric but outstandingly brilliant Alfred Dillwyn Knox, known to his many friends and admirers simply as `Dilly’.

George Steiner, the American writer and philosopher, has described the codebreaking achievements that took place at Bletchley Park as `the single greatest achievement of Britain during 1939-1945, perhaps during the 20th century as a whole’. If that is true, then Dilly’s own achievements must be ranked among the greatest in their own right.
Dilly’s work on the various Enigma ciphers was certainly among the most important and significant carried out at Bletchley. Enigma was not one single cipher machine, as is often suggested, but a family of many different ciphers and it was Dilly and his research section, of which I was a proud member, who were asked to find a way into each new cipher as it appeared.
The failure of his obituary in The Times to do him justice when he died in early 1943 was caused by the absolute secrecy surrounding the work on Enigma. The obituary mentioned that his father was a former Bishop of Manchester; that his brother was Monsignor Ronald Knox, a famous Catholic theologian; and that another brother, `Evoe’, was editor of Punch. It also mentioned his work as a Classicist reconstructing the mimes of the Greek poet and playwright Herodus.

What it could not mention was that he was one of the leading members of Room 40, the Admiralty’s celebrated codebreaking section during the First World War, broke Bolshevik ciphers during the 1920s and 30s, and Enigma ciphers during the Spanish Civil War and Second World War. What it would certainly not have been possible to mention, even without the understandable secrecy, was that Dilly’s greatest triumph had not even taken place when the obituary was written.

Shortly before he died, in great pain from the cancer, Dilly broke the Enigma cipher used by the German secret service, the Abwehr. It was this that allowed MI5 and MI6 to manipulate the intelligence the Germans were receiving through the Double Cross System and fool them into leaving too few troops in Normandy to counter the allied landings.

Now that many more previously secret records have been released into the archives, I have at last had the chance to give my old boss the credit he deserves. I felt a strong sense of déjà vu in seeing once more the same secret enemy messages that we handled over sixty years ago, but then the secrecy was such that even I was unaware of the effect Dilly’s work had on the allied success in the war. I was determined in writing this book to ensure that what Dilly did was never forgotten.

About the Author

A top codebreaker in her own right, Mavis Batey was one of Knox s female assistants at Bletchley Park. Dilly is a compelling and affectionate portait of a great British eccentric and a fascinating and detailed behind-the-scenes look into codebreaking and the hidden side of war. This is a tale from the inside by one of the few surviving protagonists and goes into unprecedented detail about the mechanics of the enigma machines and how their encipherment was achieved.

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