
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send us a text
In January 1917, a German encrypted message was intercepted by a small relay station in Cornwall and passed to the secretive world of the code breakers inhabiting the dingy Room 40 in the Admiralty building in London's Whitehall.
In the room were some of the finest minds in England, led by the enigmatic and charismatic Oxbridge scholar Albert "Dilly" Knox. The team, including a man known as "The Dormouse" and a cake-loving Vicar called Monty, decrypted the message, and its 166-word content was political and diplomatic dynamite, that changed the entire course of the Great War.
Known to this day as The Zimmerman Telegramme, the explosive contents caused the previously neutral United States to join the war on the side of the Allies. What did the telegramme say? How did the British intercept it, and why did the contents change the course of World War One? Find out in this latest podcast, where we look at the single greatest intelligence triumph of the First World War.
Support us: www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog or www.patreon.com/footstepsfothefallen
4.9
2727 ratings
Send us a text
In January 1917, a German encrypted message was intercepted by a small relay station in Cornwall and passed to the secretive world of the code breakers inhabiting the dingy Room 40 in the Admiralty building in London's Whitehall.
In the room were some of the finest minds in England, led by the enigmatic and charismatic Oxbridge scholar Albert "Dilly" Knox. The team, including a man known as "The Dormouse" and a cake-loving Vicar called Monty, decrypted the message, and its 166-word content was political and diplomatic dynamite, that changed the entire course of the Great War.
Known to this day as The Zimmerman Telegramme, the explosive contents caused the previously neutral United States to join the war on the side of the Allies. What did the telegramme say? How did the British intercept it, and why did the contents change the course of World War One? Find out in this latest podcast, where we look at the single greatest intelligence triumph of the First World War.
Support us: www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog or www.patreon.com/footstepsfothefallen
3,963 Listeners
1,193 Listeners
4,587 Listeners
672 Listeners
10 Listeners
1,209 Listeners
82 Listeners
164 Listeners
5,108 Listeners
1,685 Listeners
2,529 Listeners
13 Listeners
320 Listeners
87 Listeners
56 Listeners