Nigel de Grey

Code breaker
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCode breaker
A.K.A.Nigel Arthur de Grey
A.K.A.Nigel Arthur de Grey
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasCryptanalyst
Work fieldScience
Gender
Male
Birth27 March 1886
Death25 May 1951London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom (aged 65 years)
The details

Biography

Nigel de Grey CMG OBE (27 March 1886 – 25 May 1951) was a British codebreaker. Son of the rector of Copdock, Suffolk, and grandson of the 5th Lord Walsingham, he was educated at Eton College and became fluent in French and German. In 1907 he joined the publishing firm of William Heinemann. As he was shy and physically small, a colleague labelled him 'the door mouse'.

World War I

De Grey joined the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and served in Belgium. In early 1915 he was transferred to Naval Intelligence Division, Room 40 codebreaking section. He, Dilly Knox and Reverend William Montgomery decrypted the Zimmermann Telegram on 17 January 1917. The Zimmermann Telegram was from the German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmermann to the German ambassador Heinrich von Eckardt in Mexico, telling him to offer the Mexican government the return of the states of Arizona, Texas and New Mexico as an inducement to Mexico to side with Germany against the United States. The public disclosure of this secret Mexican-German pact brought the US into World War I. De Grey was promoted and assigned to run the NID's Mediterranean section, liaise with the director of Italian naval intelligence and focus on Austrian cipher traffic.

World War II

In World War II, Nigel de Grey was assigned to Bletchley Park where he concentrated on German traffic encrypted on the Enigma cipher machine. In September 1941 he provided a report to the Prime Minister with the first references from German authorities to their own police battalions systematically levelling villages and removing their populations. One signal boasted of 30,000 executions 'in the central area'. Following a warning made in a speech to parliament by Churchill, a German circular in October 1941 cautioned that no further references to 'sensitive operations' should be made on wireless channels.

After World War II, he remained with GC&CS, which was renamed GCHQ, eventually becoming a deputy director and led a team working on Soviet cable traffic. He retired in 1951 and died a very short time later of a heart-attack in Oxford Street, London. His wife, whom he married in 1910, survived him.

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