The world has lost one of its last surviving wartime codebreakers — and a woman whose quiet courage helped shorten the most devastating conflict in modern history.
Ruth Bourne, a former Wren who worked alongside Alan Turing to decipher the Nazi Enigma code, has died aged 98, leaving behind a legacy described as “truly historic.”
Born in Birmingham and later settling in High Barnet, Ruth was just a young woman when she joined the Women’s Royal Naval Service and was posted to the secretive huts of Bletchley Park — where she served as a Bombe machine operator and checker, entrusted with decoding intercepted German messages.
At a time when the outcome of the war balanced on a knife-edge, Ruth and her fellow Wrens worked in silence and secrecy, often in long night shifts, deciphering messages that would save countless lives and turn the tide against Hitler’s forces.
A Heroine Who Never Sought Recognition
For more than 35 years, she remained silent about her role — bound by the Official Secrets Act, and by a humility that defined her generation. Not until decades later did the world learn that young women at Bletchley were not simply assistants — they were essential to the breaking of Enigma, working machines designed by Turing himself.
In 2018, France acknowledged her contribution with its highest honour, the Légion d’honneur, recognising her part in freeing Europe from Nazi occupation.
Tributes to a Trailblazer
The Taxi Charity for Military Veterans led tributes, saying:
“Ruth’s contribution to the monumental task of breaking the Enigma cypher was truly historic.
She was a remarkable woman with immense charm and charisma, and she will be dearly missed.”
Ruth was recently photographed with fellow veteran Dorothea Barron — one of the last living links to the extraordinary team who, without ever firing a weapon, helped win a war.
A Legacy That Lives in Every Computer
Historians agree that the work at Bletchley Park:
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saved millions of lives
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accelerated Allied victories
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and laid the foundations for modern computing
The Bombe machines she helped operate were the first step toward the digital age — and the work she carried out in secret would shape the world long after the guns fell silent.
A Final Salute
In an era when women’s contributions were often overlooked, Ruth Bourne stands as a reminder that history is shaped not only by generals and politicians — but by young women in cold huts, solving puzzles under immense pressure, never expecting applause.
She lived quietly. She served silently.
And she changed history.
Today, Britain — and the free world — owes her a profound debt.
May she rest in peace.




