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ne of the most interesting and important
aspects of NCR's history is also one of its least known. During World
War II, NCR helped design, develop, and produce a machine to break
the German Enigma code, helping win the battle for control of the
Atlantic Ocean. During the war, this project was second only to the
atom bomb in terms of national security and secrecy. Information about
this machine, known as the "Bombe," and NCR's contributions
is only now being declassified more than fifty years later.
The primary use of the Enigma code was for
communication between German U-boats (submarines) and their commanders
in Europe. These U-boats patrolled the Atlantic Ocean searching
for ships transporting much needed supplies to England. When the
U-boats found these ships they would attack and sink as many as
possible, including many ships from the United States. By destroying
the supplies going to England, Germany could greatly diminish England's
ability to wage war. Until the Enigma code was broken, England would
be unable to locate the U-boats or effectively protect the supply
ships. In September of 1939, England started trying to design a
machine to decipher the German code. The first of these machines,
also called a "bombe," was finished in August of 1940,
but it was not until May of 1941 that the English were finally able
to break the Navy Enigma code. This occurred after England captured
a German U-boat that still had its encryption equipment onboard.
For the rest of the year, England was able to read the German U-boat
messages with relative ease, but that was about to change.
Sensing that the Navy Enigma code had been
compromised, German Admiral Doenitz had the Enigma machine improved
and made more complex in early 1942. This new machine, known as
the four-rotor Enigma machine, once again made it impossible for
the British to decipher the German Enigma code. Between January
and March of 1942 more than two hundred supply ships were sunk off
the East Coast of the United States. Due to the lack of success
by the British in breaking the four rotor Enigma code, the U.S.
Navy decided to undertake their own attempt at deciphering the code.
In September 1942, the U.S. Navy contracted with NCR for the development
and building of a "Bombe" capable of breaking the four-rotor
code.
Here in Dayton, that project was lead by
Joseph Desch, an engineer at NCR. By April 1943, he had 200 sailors
and 600 Waves working with the regular NCR staff to design and build
the "bombes." Many of these same people were then trained
to run the machines and assisted in the code breaking. The project
was so secret that most people involved had no idea of what they
were making or its importance, until many decades later. Some historians
claim that World War II could have gone on for as much as two more
years, with an untold loss of life, had it not been for the Allies'
ability to read Enigma messages. Those messages could not have been
read without the "bombes" and the men and women who built
them.
Due to the secret nature of the project,
we are only beginning to learn about the role that NCR and Dayton
played. We are lucky to have several important resources to help
us tell the story. Key among these is the involvement of Debbie
Anderson and her desire to know more about what her father, Joe
Desch, did during World War II. Through her research and records,
along with the records at the NCR Archive and the National Security
Agency, the story of this amazing project is coming to light. Recently,
Jim Debrosse, of the Dayton Daily News, wrote an award-winning eight-part
story for the newspaper chronicling the history of project. If you
would like to learn more about NCR and the "Bombe," please
follow the links below.
Dayton
Daily News Articles, Jim Debrosse
The
American Bombe Project, Deb Anderson
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