Book Read Free

The Woman Who Smashed Codes

Page 48

by Jason Fagone


  briefed U.S. leaders “Juanita Moody,” NSA Center for Cryptologic Heritage, Hall of Honor, https://www.nsa.gov/about/cryptologic-heritage/historical-figures-publications/hall-of-honor/2003/jmoody.shtml.

  Ann Caracristi “Ann Caracristi,” NSA Center for Cryptologic Heritage, Hall of Honor, https://www.nsa.gov/about/cryptologic-heritage/historical-figures-publications/women/honorees/caracristi.shtml.

  339 brief, verifiably true comments Sheldon, “Analytical Guide.” See the entries for Items 658, 1006, and 1006.1.

  340 “There are plenty of mysteries” ESF interview with Valaki, transcribed February 21, 2012, 8.

  first joined the agency Valaki obituary.

  “Well, thanks again, Mrs. Friedman” ESF interview with Valaki, transcribed January 12, 2012, 5.

  341 “Girl cryptanalyst and all that” Ibid.

  Valaki shut off the recorder Ibid., 6.

  “You mean to say” ESF interview with Valaki, transcribed February 21, 2012, 8.

  “I’ll bet no two women” ESF interview with Valaki, transcribed January 10, 2012, 8.

  the women laughed Ibid. The transcript reads, “((Both laugh.))”

  INDEX

  The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

  Abwehr, 225, 227–28, 246, 263–64

  “acoustical levitation device,” 44

  Acoustics Laboratory (Riverbank), 25, 102

  ADFGVX cipher, 104

  Alexandrine von Taxis, 71

  Allied bombing of Germany, 286–87, 301–2

  All This and Heaven Too (Field), 184, 192–94, 233

  America First Committee, 214

  American Black Chamber, The (Yardley), 160–63, 165, 271, 332

  American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), 101, 102–6, 108

  American General Headquarters (GHQ), 102–6, 108

  American Magazine, 296, 299

  American University, 156

  AMT VI, 225–26, 261, 265, 286–87

  Amytal, 219, 270, 313

  anagrams, 39, 322

  Anderson, Jeanne, 339

  Angooki Taipu A, 149–50

  Angooki Taipu B, 149–50

  anti-Jewish pogroms, 58, 59, 170

  anti-Semitism, 59, 130, 182–83, 213–14

  Argentina, 180–83

  Becker in, 224–29, 263–66, 274, 275–78, 283–84, 287–91, 302

  break with Nazi Germany, 285, 286–88, 289

  coup d’état of 1943, 273, 274, 275, 284

  fascist politics in, 182–83, 283–84

  FBI in, 205–6, 288–91

  German immigrants in, 181–82

  Hellmuth Affair, 275–76, 278, 279–81, 287–91

  Nazi radio operations, 228–29, 261–66, 283–84

  Circuit 3-N, 260–61, 266–69, 272–75, 277–79, 285

  Perón and, 265–66, 273, 275–76, 284, 303

  secret weapons deal with Nazi Germany, 272–73, 274–77, 279–80

  support for Nazi Germany, 183–84, 262–63, 265–66, 273–74

  Utzinger in, 261–66, 276–78, 283–84, 287, 291–92, 297, 302–3

  Arizona, USS, 237

  Arlington Hall, 252–53, 269–70, 303, 316, 318. See also Signal Intelligence Service

  Arlington National Cemetery, 304, 335, 338–39

  Armatou, Louis “Frenchy,” 138–39

  Armistice of World War I, 107–8

  Army, U.S.

  G-2 (intelligence), 201, 204, 231

  jurisdictional squabbles, 254–55

  “word-equivalent” alphabet, 75

  Army Air Corps, 251, 315

  Army Signal Corps, 120–22

  Elizebeth in, 120–22

  resignation, 126

  William in, 98–99, 102, 120–22, 128

  codebreaking, 125–26, 129–30, 140, 147–48

  Army Signal Corps School, 67

  Army War College, 100–101

  Asama Maru, 166–67

  Astaire, Fred, 181

  atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 312, 313–15

  Aumann, Eduardo, 273

  Aurora-Elgin and Fox River Electric Company, 22

  Auschwitz concentration camp, 178, 302

  Austria, 180, 181

  “back-to-the-soil” movement, 59–60

  Bacon, Francis, 38–42. See also Bacon’s cipher

  Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship, 38–42, 321–23

  arguments against, 54–57, 61–62

  basic theory of, 40–42

  brief history of, 39–40

  Bacon’s cipher (Baconian cryptology), 39–46, 321–23, 335

  Riverbank research, 30, 33–34, 37–38, 40–48, 54–57, 65, 112–13

  Bamford, James, 337

  Bank of New York, 292

  Barkley, Fred and Claire, 250

  Barnum, P. T., 18

  Battle of Midway, 212, 252

  Battle of Stalingrad, 265

  Battle of the Coral Sea, 212

  Battle of the United States (film), 299–300

  Batvinis, Raymond J., 234

  Baxter, James Phinney, 44

  Beaconsfield POW camp, 312

  Beale Treasure, 156

  Becker, Johannes Siegfried “Sargo,” 223, 223–29

  appearance of, 224, 263

  arrest and imprisonment of, 302–3

  Bolivia coup plotting, 274, 277, 281, 283, 415n

  espionage activities, 227–31, 241, 242, 245, 263–66, 268–69, 273, 274, 277–78, 281, 283–84, 287

  FBI and, 223–24, 245, 247, 289–91

  first spying missions, 224–25

  Hellmuth Affair and, 289–91

  in hiding, 296–97

  Perón and, 263–66, 273, 274, 275–76, 283–84, 302

  secret weapons deal, 275–76, 277–78

  Bell Labs, 91

  Berchtesgaden, 310

  Berlin bombing, 286–87

  Bezdek, Vladimir, 229

  biliteral ciphers, 41–44, 57, 61, 66, 69, 75, 101, 102, 154

  Biliteral Cypher of Sir Francis Bacon Discovered in His Works (Gallup), 43–44

  binary code, 41

  Blackburn, W. G. B., 206

  Black Chamber, 100–101, 104, 109, 121, 147–48, 157, 169

  The American Black Chamber (Yardley), 160–63, 165, 271, 332

  Blackstone Hotel (Chicago), 331

  Bletchley Park, 197, 217, 221, 267

  coordination with coast guard, 259

  Enigma and, 197, 200–201, 269, 285–86

  William at, 270, 304, 312–13, 317

  women in, 197

  Bliss, Cornelius N., 66

  Bliss Fabyan & Company, 23–24

  Blue Enigma, 264, 268

  Blumenfeld, Isadore “Kid Cann,” 384n

  Bolivia, 180–81, 303

  coup d’état of 1943, 283–84

  German immigrants in, 181–82

  Nazi clandestine activities in, 273, 274, 275–76

  plotting of coup, 274, 277, 281, 415n

  support for Nazi Germany, 183–84, 266

  bombes, 124, 196–97

  book ciphers, 84, 190–94, 231, 255

  bootlegging. See rum-running

  Bratzel, John, 246, 298

  Braun, Eva, 311

  Brazil, 180–83, 243–47

  arrests and roundups in, 243–47, 253–54, 262

  Becker in, 224, 225, 227

  Engels in, 227–29, 241–42, 243, 245, 247

  fascist politics in, 182–83, 274

  FBI in, 205–6, 243–47, 253–54, 262, 289

  German immigrants in, 181–82

  Nazi clandestine activities in, 224, 225, 229–30, 241–44, 247, 262–63

  support for Nazi Germany, 183–84, 262–63, 266

  Brazilian Integralism, 182, 278, 284

  Britain

  Hindu-German Conspiracy, 80–83

  in World War I, 63, 67, 86–
88, 107

  in World War II, 180–81, 187–88, 204, 213–18, 227, 242, 254–56, 279–81, 288–89, 301–2, 305. See also Bletchley Park

  British Security Co-ordination (BSC), 214–18, 238, 254–55

  Brummell, Beau, 29

  Bryden, John, 242

  Buenos Aires

  Becker in, 224–29, 263–66, 274, 275–78, 283–84, 287–91, 302

  FBI in, 205–6, 288–91

  German immigrants in, 181–82

  Hellmuth Affair, 275–76, 278, 279–81, 287–91

  Nazi radio operations, 228–29, 261–66, 283–84

  Circuit 3-N, 260–61, 266–69, 272–75, 277–79, 285

  support for Nazi Germany, 183–84, 265–66, 273–74

  Utzinger in, 261–66, 276–78, 283–84, 287, 291–92, 297, 302–3

  Bullitt, William, 179

  Burke, Billie, 51

  Byrd, Richard, 51

  Cabell, James Branch, 9–10

  cabinet noir, 71

  Cabo de Hornos (ship), 276, 279–80

  cacao, 257–58

  Callimahos, Lambros, 85

  Camp 020, 280–81

  Canine, Ralph, 333

  Capone, Al, 135, 144, 145, 146–47

  Capra, Frank, 299–300

  Caracristi, Ann, 339

  Carson, Anne, 63

  Carter, Jimmy, 3

  Cassie (nanny), 132

  Chaplin, Charlie, 262

  Chicago, 10–11, 12–13

  Chicago Daily News, 25, 26, 27

  Chicago Evening American, 158

  Chicago Fire of 1871, 12

  Chicago Herald, 24

  Chicago & North Western Terminal, 16–17, 35

  Chicago Stock Exchange, 51

  Chicago Times, 13

  Chicago Tribune, 13, 30

  Chicago World’s Fair (1893), 13, 32

  Childs, J. Rives, 85

  Chile, 266

  German immigrants in, 180–81

  Nazi clandestine activities in, 226, 241, 243–44, 247, 259, 274, 277, 278

  support for Nazi Germany, 183–84, 263

  Chongqing bombing, 171

  Christmas cards, 153–54, 217, 255–56, 300–301

  Churchill, Winston, 212

  CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), 189, 215–16, 240

  ciphers. See also specific types of ciphers

  defined, xvi

  cipher board games, 154–55, 172

  cipher discs, 86–88

  cipher machines, 40, 44, 119–20, 122–26, 149–50, 170–71, 184, 187

  Ciphers for the Little Ones (Fabyan), 57

  “circuits,” 189

  Circuit 3-N, 249, 260–61, 266–69, 272–75, 278–79, 285

  “clandestine,” 184–85

  clandestine circuits, 189–90. See also Circuit 3-N

  Clark, Marvin, 138–39

  Cleopatra (movie), 172

  Coast Guard Cryptanalytic Unit, 133–47. See also Friedman, Elizebeth Smith, at Treasury and coast guard

  creation of unit, 139–40, 141–42

  FBI’s relationship with, 231–35

  move to Naval Annex, 252–53, 269–70

  transfer to navy jurisdiction, 235–36

  code, defined, xvi

  codebreakers. See also specific codebreakers

  brief history of, 66–67, 71–72

  defined, xvi

  mental strain on, 125

  personality of, 70, 125

  sexism and, 70–71

  codebreaking

  basic task of, 70–71, 72–74

  use of term, 84

  coincidence counting, 113, 199

  Columbia University, 141, 171

  Condor airline, 182, 228

  Consolidated Exporters Corporation, 135–39, 143–47, 331

  Converter M-134, 149–50, 170–71

  Cooley, Vernon, 142, 186–87

  Cooper, Gary, 214

  Coordinación Federal, 302

  Copacabana Beach, 181

  Cornell University, 58, 60, 96

  Cornero, Tony “The Hat,” 138

  C-rations, 309

  “cribs” (crib-based detection), 197

  Crimea, 256

  Crosby, Francis, 289–90

  “cryptanalysis,” William’s invention of term, 84

  cryptanalysts. See also codebreakers

  defined, xvi

  cryptograms

  defined, xvi

  frequencies of letters, 69–70, 83–84

  “The Gold-Bug” (Poe), 60–61

  cryptographers, defined, xvi

  Cryptography Engineering (Schneier, Ferguson, and Kohno), 119

  Cryptolog (journal), 340

  “cryptologic schizophrenia,” 237–38

  cryptology, defined, xvi

  Crypto-Set Headquarters Army Game, 155

  Cuba, 180

  Cuban Missile Crisis, 339

  Cumming, Belle, 50, 159

  Cunningham, Walter McCook, 322

  Curie, Marie, 142

  Czechoslovakia, 180, 308

  Dachau concentration camp, 143, 178, 302

  Dahl, Roald, 214–15

  Darwin, Charles, 39

  De Augmentis Scientarium (Bacon), 40

  De Furtivis Literarum Notis (della Porta), 155–56

  Delegacia de Ordem Politica e Social (DOPS), 245–46

  Della Porta, Giambattista, 155–56

  DeMille, Cecil B., 172

  Detective Fiction Weekly, 169

  Dickinson, Velvalee, 292–96

  digital ciphers, 124

  Dinieus, Edna Smith, 7, 170, 311

  death of mother, 64–65

  Mexican vacation, 207

  William and, 60

  disappearing ink, 184

  DNA, 24

  Doe, Harry, 144

  Doll Lady. See Dickinson, Velvalee

  Donovan, William, 240–41, 316

  Dove, Billie, 51

  Driscoll, Agnes Meyer, 131

  Drosophila melanogaster, 49–50, 58

  Dunninger, Joseph “Amazing Dunninger,” 321

  Duquesne, Frederick Joubert, 232–34, 300

  Eagle’s Nest (Kehlsteinhaus), 306, 310–11

  Ecuador, 180–81

  Edison, Thomas, 24

  Einsatzgruppen, 178

  Einstein, Albert, 24, 79, 308, 355n

  Eisenhour, Bert, 30, 44, 48–49

  electroshock therapy, 151, 219

  Elizabeth I of England, 11–12, 38–39, 43, 57

  Engels, Albrecht “Alfredo,” 227–29, 241–42, 243, 245, 247

  Engledew Cottage, 46, 84, 97

  Enigma, 125–26, 194–202, 263–64, 283

  British codebreakers, 124, 196–97, 221

  Circuit 3-N, 249, 260–61, 266–69, 272–75, 278–79, 285

  Elizebeth’s work, 194, 197–202, 260–61, 267, 283, 284–86

  Polish breakthroughs, 196–97, 200

  William’s curiosity about, 125–26

  Enola Gay, 313–14

  Erasmus, 8, 9

  Ezra, Isaac, 166–67, 331

  Ezra, Judah, 166–67, 331

  Fabyan, George

  appearance of, 52–53

  declining health and death of, 158–59, 322

  Elizebeth and, 46, 51–52, 53, 156

  departure and return from Riverbank, 113–15

  first meeting and job offer, 5–6, 15–19

  family background of, 23–24, 89–90

  personality of, 51–53, 95

  Riverbank Laboratories. See Fabyan, George, and Riverbank

  rumors about, 21–22

  Vierling compared with, 308

  William and, 53, 58–59, 95, 112–13, 123–24, 131–32, 142, 158–60, 313

  Fabyan, George, and Riverbank, 21, 21–22, 51–53, 95

  Baconian cryptology, 34, 35, 44, 54–55, 57, 65, 112–13, 158, 322, 323

  copyright issues, 78–79, 123–24, 156–57

  dinnertime, 29–31

  scientific research
, 24–28, 53–54

  size and scope of, 50

  the Villa, 24, 25, 31–32, 46, 52, 98, 159

  William and Elizebeth’s departure and return, 113–15

  World War I work, 67, 77–78, 98–99, 100–102

  Fabyan, Nelle, 26, 30, 32, 46, 51, 159–60

  Fabyan Scouts, 52

  Farley, John, 187, 201

  Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

  British spies and, 215–16, 254

  coast guard’s relationship with, 231–35

  Cryptographic Branch, 206

  Dickinson case, 292–96

  Duquesne spy ring, 232–34

  Elizebeth and, 203–4, 206, 217–18

  jurisdictional squabbles, 254–55

  post-war activities, 321, 329

  publicity seeking, 134–35, 298–300

  Rumrich case, 204–5

  South American counterintelligence, 205–6, 231–34, 243–47, 253–54, 262, 288–91

  Becker and, 223–24, 245, 247, 289–91

  Hellmuth Affair, 288–91

  Utzinger and, 247, 291, 297

  Special Intelligence Service (SIS), 205–6, 231–34

  Teapot Dome case, 129–30

  Technical Research Laboratory, 206, 217–18, 232

  World War I and, 67

  Federal Communications Commission (FCC), 206, 217, 229, 242, 245–46, 259–60, 290

  Feinstein, Genevieve Grotjan, 209–11

  Figl, (Andreas), 148

  Fiske, Gertrude Horsford, 44

  Fleming, Ian, 214–15

  Flying to Rio (musical), 181

  Ford, Henry, 130

  Fort Meade, 332, 337

  Fox River, 32, 33, 46, 94

  Fox Valley Guards, 52, 66, 68

  France, in World War II, 180–81, 207, 208, 253, 256

  Frank, Waldo, 262–63

  Freedom of Information Act, 337

  Freeman, Walter, 151

  Frémont, Jessie and John, 152–53

  French Légion d’Honneur, 25

  Frente de Guerra, 183

  frequency tables, 72, 73, 74, 75, 367n

  Fricke, Wilhelm, 312

  Friedman, Barbara, 131–33

  birth of, 131

  cryptograms, 132–33, 153, 194

  education of, 206–7, 321

  father’s depression, 151

  jobs and career, 301, 304

  Leninism and, 251

  NBC interview with mother, 164

  in New York City, 251

  travels of mother, 139

  World War II and, 304, 305

  Zionism and, 309–10

  Friedman, Elizebeth Smith, xi–xv

  appearance of, 5, 6

  at Army Signal Corps, 120–22

  resignation, 126

  Bethesda, Maryland, house, 127–28, 133

  Chicago move, 10–11

  children and parenting, 131–33, 164–65, 206–7, 301, 304, 305, 321

  Christmas cards, 153–54, 217, 255–56, 300–301

  cipher board games, 154–55, 172

  at coast guard. See Friedman, Elizebeth Smith, at Treasury and coast guard

 

‹ Prev