We went to Bletchley Park a couple of years ago and the one thing that fascinated me most was the idea that the person in charge - whose name escapes me - had the foresight to realise that they needed to employ brilliant people and to accept that they would include a number of oddballs and eccentrics
Alastair Denniston.
I only found out recently that Hugh Alexander, who was British chess champion and whose columns I read every week, was part of the merry gang at Bletchley.
The most remarkable aspect of the whole BP operation was that the government didn't actually own the house or estate. It was owned by a bloke called Hugh Sinclair (who was a big cheese in the secret service). He died just after the war started and the house passed to his estate.
That just seems so British somehow
EDIT: Just looked up Hugh Alexander and discovered that Harry Golombek, another big chess name from my youth, was also at BP. It really was a Who's Who of British chess (strangely, there seem to be no big names from British bridge involved - although Boris Schapiro was an intelligence office, but not at BP)
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