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An inspiring story of a code-breaker from Bletchley Park who put off personal suffering and helped defeat the Germans was revealed 76 years later.
Former accountant Daisy Lawrence has deciphered intercepted hostile messages between the Japanese, Germans and Italians in her top-secret role.
She showed incredible mental fortitude as her military fiancé Stanley missed the action after the fall Singapore in 1942.
He later turned out to have been captured and was in a hellish Japanese POW camp.

Daisy Lawrence (pictured) was working as an accounting clerk when she was hired for a top secret role because of her mathematical skills.
Daisy, who was hired as a codebook breaker due to her mathematical skills, hid her work years later and even hid it from her own family.
It was only after her death that her own daughters Jan Slimming and Jill Robertson found out about it when they read her mother’s estate.
Letters, documents and newspaper clippings about her time were discovered in Bletchley Park, home of government World War II code-breakers in Buckinghamshire.
Mrs. Slimming was so taken by this that she has now published it in a new book entitled ‘Codebreaker Girls: A Secret Life at Bletchley Park.’
She later visited Bletchley Park to get the full story of her mother’s time there.

Daisy hid her work for years after World War II and even hid it from her own family
She learned that Daisy and other code-breakers in Bletchley Park checked more than 18,000 intercepted transcripts before D-Day, providing key intelligence for the invasion.
Ms. Slimming, a former publisher living in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, said: “My mom said she’s an archiving clerk there and that’s all we’ve known for years.
In fact, she took a six-week secret course where she learned the beginnings of breaking code, including intercepting the German Enigma.
“However, after training, she was manually selected for another department, especially with regard to intercepted Japanese communications by various departments of diplomatic embassies, including Germany and Italy.
‘The encrypted messages were in the JN code group – the Japanese Navy Code. It was assigned to the naval division of hut 7 to deal with Japanese interceptors.
‘After my mother died in 2006, my twin sister and I found hidden newspaper clippings, documents from the Foreign Ministry and a handful of photos of anonymous people.

It was only after her death that her own daughters Jan Slimming and Jill Robertson found letters, documents and newspaper clippings about her time at Bletchley Park, home of government World War II code-breakers in Buckinghamshire. Pictured: Daisy, second from left in the front row
‘From there, I wanted to discover her story of World War II.’
Daisy and Stanley met when they were 16 years old, working together at the Co-operatives in Tooting, South London.
After the war, she worked for the Foreign Ministry in the diplomatic part of the Indian office in Westminster.
In later life, she worked as an office worker until her retirement in the 1990s.
Stanley died in 2001, and she died in West Sussex at the age of 89 in 2006.
The book has a foreword by Sir Dermot Turing, nephew of Alan Turing, who broke the Enigma code.
He writes, “What makes Codebreaker Girls special is a personal element.
‘The main character is Daisy Lawrence and through her eyes we see Bletchley Park.
‘This approach, richly colored by Daisy’s own archival material, allows us to see directly what the young woman’s experience at Bletchley was like.’
The work done by the Government School of Encryption and Encryption (GC&CS) in Bletchley Park in Bucks is estimated to have shortened the war in Europe by more than two years and saved more than 14 million lives.
Codebreaker Girls: A Secret Life at Bletchley Park, by Jan Slimming, is published by Pen & Sword and costs £ 25.
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