Pamela Pigeon

Pamela Pigeon (1918–?) was a New Zealand-British cryptographer who was the first female commander in Britain's Government Communications Headquarters, known as GCHQ.[1]

Biography

Pigeon's father, a surgeon, immigrated to New Zealand in 1902. She grew up in Wellington, New Zealand, where she attended Queen Margaret College and won awards for language and speech writing.[1]

It's not known when she emigrated to Britain. However, during World War II she worked as part of a secret intelligence unit located in Marston Montgomery, a remote base in Derbyshire set up in 1941 as an outpost of RAF Cheadle. In around 1943, she became the leader of a team of linguists who listened in on shortwave German naval and air force radio broadcasts to decode information on troop movements.[1] The team also worked "fingerprinting individual German radios," identifying them through the fact that "each crystal at the heart of a radio oscillated slightly differently."[2] Their work helped to sink the Bismarck, a crucial German battleship.[1] GCHQ historian Tony Comer identifies this as a key moment in the war.[3]

gollark: Statistics is good for lots of things. I unironically used standard deviations a few times.
gollark: Just describe your data as an infinite amount of summary statistics. I don't see the problem.
gollark: Means and medians are both statistics. Checkmate, atheist.
gollark: =tex \left(\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}x}\right)^{10} \left(\int\right)^{10}
gollark: You should try TeXing better.

References

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