It isn’t about Turing in particular, but you can see a replica of the Manchester Baby, a computer that Turing programmed, and the first computer to store user-entered software in electronic memory, at the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester.
In Cambridge MA USA, at the MIT Flea (electronics junk market), I saw a guy showing artifacts from an Engima machine. Don’t know if he has a more permanent exhibition or not.
I think your notes in the question pretty much cover it, but there’s much more at Bletchley Park than just a display. There is:
In “Museum in Block B”, a whole gallery titled The Life and Works of Alan Turing, including:
Information about his life and achievements outside of his work at Bletchley Park, and his impact, including:
…a letter to Alan Turing’s mother written 20 years after his death when she was told for the very first time what a huge contribution he’d made to the outcome of World War II and also the vital contribution he’d made to the modern computer
Various personal items donated by his family, including a teddy bear he used as a practice audience for his lectures, and a hand-drawn Monopoly board he played on as a child.
It’s described as:
…the most comprehensive exhibition of the life and works of Alan Turing in the world
The real Office of Alan Turing, Head of Hut 8, recreated to how it would have looked in World War Two complete with the mug chained to the radiator.
The only known example of used Banbury sheets, a system devised by Alan Turing to help find the daily-changing Enigma settings
The world’s only fully operational Bombe rebuild – the electro-mechanical device used to mechanise the process of breaking Enigma
Bletchley Park is definitely the place to start, and it’ll also be worth talking to staff and volunteers who are likely to be able to tell you plenty more about him and about which other sites are worth seeing.
There’s also a little about him in his childhood home town of Guildford in Surrey (a short distance south of London), which is described in this article. There’s not much to see (an English Heritage Blue plaque outside his old family home, a road named after him…) but there is a two mile guided walk available with more of a focus on his childhood and how his family saw him.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024