After watching The Imitation Game a couple of years ago, I became fascinated with the story of Alan Turing and the World War 2 codebreakers at Bletchley Park. Bletchley Park is located in Buckinghamshire, only a short drive away from Milton Keynes and during the Second World War it was home to codebreakers, mathematicians and translators who were trying to decrypt messages which were sent via German communication systems. The work that was carried out at Bletchley Park was top secret and it wasn’t until the 1970s that the employees at Bletchley got the public recognition they deserved. Today, you can visit the original research site and tour some of the huts where the secret war heroes worked. We bought Virgin Experience Days tickets for Bletchley Park a little while ago and visited in mid May.
We arrived at Bletchley when it opened, which turned out to be a good idea as the park gets very busy on Saturdays. We picked up our tickets and walked straight through to the introductory exhibition, which provided you with some background knowledge about the facility and startling statistics about the number of people that worked tirelessly at Bletchley to help the war effort. There were lots of interactive screens and activities which you could mess about with, in order to gain a better understanding of how the code breaking process worked and how difficult Enigma (the communication encryption process that the Germans used) was to break.
Once we’d covered this section of the museum, it was time to head out the back and actually follow in the footsteps of the codebreakers. Bletchley Park feels very much like a University campus, with lots of different buildings, a lake and sports facilities. Translation, problem solving and being able to work with numbers were some of the skills required at Bletchley Park. Employees were distributed across the huts and buildings depending on their skill set. We were able to walk into most of the buildings and learn about the specific work that was carried out.
Hut 8
The Bombe Breakthrough in Hut 11A
The Mansion
We also visited the Library inside The Mansion, which has been restored to its WWII state.
The grounds
The gift shop
Before we left the park around lunchtime we stopped at the gift shop, which had some fab war-themed souvenirs. I picked up a couple of postcards for my scrapbook.We spent 3 and a half hours at Bletchley and this was an ample amount of time to see the park’s important historic sights. When you buy Bletchley Park tickets, they are valid for re-entry over the next 12 months, so I’m definitely hoping to make the most of this in the near future. Our tickets were discounted as it is because there was a Virgin Experience Days voucher code available when we booked them, and if we could go back again within the next year we’d definitely have got our money’s worth! Bletchley Park is a fantastic day out that I’d recommend to anyone who is interested in WWII history.
Have you ever been to Bletchley Park?
Thanks for reading my blog today.
Love
Kat
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Don't you think that the Virgin Experience Days tickets are too expensive? I mean I was searching the site to gift an experience to my girlfriend on her birthday, but damn, they were so expensive. I had to look up the Virgin Experience Days Discount Code on the internet, but did't find any cheap codes
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