Bletchley code breaker Betty Webb dies aged 101

2025-04-0112:5527644www.bbc.com

Betty Webb MBE worked at Bletchley Park during World War Two intercepting enemy messages.

Aida Fofana

BBC News, West Midlands

PA Media Mrs Webb sat in the front row in a red skirt suit surrounded by other people in large hats, floral print dresses and trouser suits at the Kings Coronation.PA Media

Betty Webb, seen in the front row in a red suit, was invited to the Coronation

In 2023, she and her niece were among 2,200 people from 203 countries invited to Westminster Abbey to see King Charles III's coronation.

The same year she celebrated her 100th birthday at Bletchley Park with a party.

She and her guests were treated to a fly-past by a Lancaster bomber. She said at the time: "It was for me - it's unbelievable isn't it? Little me."


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Comments

  • By icosian 2025-04-0115:233 reply

    Only about a dozen years ago Bletchley was inviting former codebreakers back for an annual reunion. I used to go along to hear the talks, meet some of them and get books signed, including by Betty Webb. I'm glad they eventually got the recognition they deserved.

    We have almost lost the chance now to hear personal testimony of WWII. I've met several Battle of Britain pilots too, but the last died in Dublin recently:

    https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2025/0318/1502596-hemingway/

    • By sys32768 2025-04-0117:31

      Two years ago my mother's memory care home had an American Battle of the Bulge veteran and Bronze Star winner who was sharp as a tack.

      He was 99 and said he just wanted to live to be 100, but sadly he didn't make it.

      I remember my late grandmother telling us they had made mittens for my great uncle, but he died in that battle before the mittens arrived.

      Crazy to think I passed up my chance to have a cup of coffee with a man who might have fought beside my great uncle.

    • By zeke 2025-04-0118:17

      In 2001 in the small town of Hartsville SC, one of the youngest code breakers gave his last two public talks. He had been hired by Turing because he was one of the few studying both math and German at the start of the war.

      Besides being very interesting it felt odd to hear all this in such an out of the way place. Well after the war he collaborated on some books with a professor teaching at the college there.

    • By andrepd 2025-04-0117:131 reply

      It's insane how the largest conflict in human history is just now passing out of living memory. It's also insane how 1 in 4 Americans under 40 believe the holocaust is a fabrication or exaggeration.

      • By dylan604 2025-04-0118:232 reply

        the power of disinformation on social media platforms is apparently stronger than classroom teaching. it doesn't help that what is taught in classrooms is just getting worse for $reasons which is only going to get worse now that states are going to do whatever they want with schools now.

    • By tocs3 2025-04-0115:072 reply

      From wikipedia:

      some tasks performed include registering messages on little cards, which Webb believes totaled 10,000 a day in the whole park, and organizing the cards into shoeboxes according to a strict order so they could be retrieved efficiently when called for.

      I suppose times have changed.

      • By hermitShell 2025-04-0118:55

        Technology has changed for sure. Is our usage of human capital any better as a whole? Probably not. So many BS jobs out there.

      • By dylan604 2025-04-0118:24

        they called them computers for a reason

  • By linsomniac 2025-04-0114:254 reply

    Somewhat unrelated: I'm hoping to go to Bletchley Park this summer, any recommendations?

    • By cjs_ac 2025-04-0114:323 reply

      The main 'Bletchley Park' exhibition is good, but it focuses on the human experience of the code breakers. Head around the corner from the car park to the National Museum of Computing (also on the Bletchley Park site) to see more technical exhibitions: they give proper demonstrations of the machines invented at Bletchley, as well as the oldest working computer in the world (which was computing prime numbers when I visited).

      https://www.tnmoc.org/

      • By tialaramex 2025-04-0115:181 reply

        Also, and not obvious, because these two entities are distinct despite occupying the same site: they're not always open at the same time. So if you want to see both, even if you plan to spend more time at one than the other, check they're both open.

        Whether something is the first computer is - inevitably - a definitional argument, but TNMOC has several candidates (though not all of them) including (a modern reproduction of, the original was destroyed as a secret) Colossus which is famous because of its involvement in the war.

        Bletchley Park is also still an actual stateley home, all the war stuff was built on somebody's grounds - there's a good chance you either don't care about stately homes or you're intending to visit a more interesting one (or indeed one of the Royal Palaces), in which case no need to care, but that's a third distinct thing on the same site.

        [Edited to make clear there is no original Colossus, we destroyed it because it was a secret]

      • By whyage 2025-04-0120:02

        I wouldn't skip the main exhibition area. In an era where people were called computers, the human experience was at the heart of the Bletchley Park machine. In the main area, you learn about the makeup of this apparatus: the different roles people had, how information flowed within and between the huts, and much more. There's also a little museum with fascinating artifacts and an area dedicated to Turing. Don't miss it.

      • By hermitcrab 2025-04-0118:59

        Agreed, it is well worth visiting both.

    • By icosian 2025-04-0115:29

      I don't know if they are still in print but Bletchley Park Trust published a great series of monographs on particular aspects of the codebreaking story there. Highly technical, written by specialists, sometimes by people who had worked there. I picked up a load of them when I was there and can recommend.

    • By easterncalculus 2025-04-0115:44

      Definitely enjoy the scenery. I've done Bletchley and the National Cryptologic Museum, the former is in a genuinely beautiful location, especially if you have sun.

    • By nemo44x 2025-04-0114:33

      They have a neat computer history museum there so make time for that too.

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