fbpx
Wikipedia

F. W. Winterbotham

Frederick William Winterbotham CBE (16 April 1897 – 28 January 1990) was a British Royal Air Force officer (latterly a Group Captain) who during World War II supervised the distribution of Ultra intelligence. His book The Ultra Secret was the first popular account of Ultra to be published in Britain.

F. W. Winterbotham
F.W. Winterbotham in Royal Flying Corps uniform
Birth nameFrederick William Winterbotham
Born(1897-04-16)16 April 1897
Stroud, Gloucestershire, England
Died28 January 1990(1990-01-28) (aged 92)
Blandford, Dorset, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
 Royal Air Force
Years of service1914–1918, 1939–1946
RankGroup Captain
Battles/warsWorld War I World War II
AwardsCommander of the British Empire (CBE)
Other work
  • author

Family and education

He was born in Stroud, Gloucestershire, the younger child and only son of Frederick Winterbotham, solicitor, and his wife, Florence Vernon Graham. He was educated at Charterhouse School, in Godalming, Surrey. He married four times: Erica Horniman (1921), daughter of Frederick John Horniman, tea trader and MP, Madge Mary Moncrieff Anderson (1939), Joan Petrea Trant (1948) and Kathleen Price (1987).[1]

World War I service

At the start of the war, in 1914, he enlisted in the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars Yeomanry, but in 1916 they lost their horses and were to be supplied with bicycles or transferred to infantry. So he transferred to the Royal Flying Corps in 1916, and became a fighter pilot. He was shot down and captured on 13 July 1917, being shot down in a dogfight in Passchendaele by a member of the Richtofen Geschwader. He spent the rest of the war as a prisoner, and "passed the time" learning German. For much of the time he was in the Holzminden prisoner-of-war camp. [2]

Between the wars

Upon his release in 1918 he went to Christ Church, Oxford, to study law. He took a law degree (1920) in the shortened course for returning servicemen,[3] but had no liking for an office job. He pursued farming opportunities in Britain, Kenya, and Rhodesia without success. By 1929 he was back in Britain, and considered becoming a stockbroker in the City. Instead he was recruited to join the staff of the Royal Air Force, where he was assigned to the newly created Air Section of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI-6).[4] During the next few years, Winterbotham began the process of building up an intelligence service for the RAF. His job was to gather information on the development of military aviation in hostile or potentially hostile countries. He recruited agents, and filed and analyzed their reports.

One of these reports revealed that Germany had secret arrangements with the Soviet Union for the training of military pilots in violation of the Treaty of Versailles. William de Ropp, the agent who supplied this information, also informed Winterbotham that the Nazis, not yet in power, wanted to cultivate high-level contacts in Britain; they imagined that "imperialist" Britain would be sympathetic to their own dreams of racial conquest. Winterbotham, who was socially well connected, seemed a likely channel.[4]

This led to a visit by Nazi "philosopher" Alfred Rosenberg in 1932. Winterbotham, with the full knowledge of MI-6, escorted Rosenberg around Britain, made some appropriate introductions, and played up to him. Neither Ropp nor Rosenberg knew that Winterbotham had any intelligence connections—he was just a civilian official of the Air Staff.

Winterbotham continued in this role for the next seven years. He became a regular visitor to Germany, and an apparent Nazi sympathizer. As such, he was welcomed into the highest circles in Germany, meeting Hitler and Göring, and with Göring's Luftwaffe subordinates such as Erhard Milch and Albert von Kesselring. He gathered a tremendous amount of information on the Luftwaffe and on German political and military intentions.[5]

It seems he was also involved in an observer mission with General Franco's fascist forces in the Spanish Civil War. A report written by a William Winterbotham, dated 16 February 1937, filed in AIR 40/224, provides highly technical analysis of events that reflected his professional military experience. It was read by a member of the Air Intelligence Staff on 26 September 1937.[6]

In 1938, Winterbotham recruited Sidney Cotton to carry out some very successful aerial reconnaissance over Italy and Germany in 1939–40 in a private Lockheed 12A aircraft.

Ultra

These activities came to an end when World War II broke out in 1939. As a top ranking member of MI6 (he reported directly to its head, Sir Hugh Sinclair, and his successor in 1940, Sir Stewart Menzies), Winterbotham was fully aware of Britain's successful code-breaking operation against the German Enigma cipher machine. The intelligence derived from Enigma decrypts was absolutely authentic (as the decrypted messages were genuine German communications) and it was often of immense value. This source was so valuable it was given the special classification "Top Secret Ultra", or simply "Ultra".

In April 1940 the cryptographers at Bletchley Park made a breakthrough when they succeeded in deciphering four small messages regarding Luftwaffe personnel. This led Winterbotham to consider how the information from this would be handled once it became more plentiful, and he shared his ideas on this topic with his Chief. His chief gave him "permission to set up a completely new organisation for the translation, distribution and complete security of the decoded signals...". A key part of the solution was arranging for the secure delivery of Ultra to the various commanders, and making sure that they did nothing to give away the secret that Enigma was being read. Winterbotham took charge of this process. He formed "Special Liaison Units", which were attached to each field headquarters that received Enigma.[7] An SLU consisted of a few RAF officers and enlisted men, low in rank to avoid drawing attention. They received Ultra messages by radio from Britain, carefully encrypted in Britain's strongest cipher. They decrypted the messages, and handed them over to the commander, who was often the only person cleared to know where the information came from. (At some HQs, there might be one or two deputies also cleared.) The SLU was expected to retrieve the Ultra message after the commander had read it and keep it under lock and key.[7]

The SLU was also expected to keep the recipient commander from telling anyone else about the origins of the message or acting too obviously on its contents. Naturally, this sometimes led to conflicts with field commanders who objected to being second-guessed. After the U.S. entered the war, these field commanders were often not British.[7] Winterbotham was responsible for recruiting and training the SLU personnel for this difficult role. They had to be very able technically, be close-mouthed, keep a low profile, and also be diplomatic enough to manage commanders who far outranked them. When diplomacy failed, Winterbotham flew out to the problem HQ to resolve the quarrel. He had the ultimate authority of the Allied governments behind him, as both Britain and the U.S. would do almost anything to avoid exposing the secret of the decryptions.[7]

The Ultra Secret

Ultra remained secret even after the war. Then in 1974, Winterbotham's book, The Ultra Secret, was published. This was the first book in English about Ultra, and it explained what Ultra was, and revealed Winterbotham's role, particularly with regard to the dissemination and use of Ultra.

There had been mentions of Enigma decryption in earlier books by Władysław Kozaczuk, Ladislas Farago and Gustave Bertrand. However, Winterbotham's book was the first extensive account of the uses to which the massive volumes of Enigma-derived intelligence were put by the Allies, on the western and eastern European fronts, in the Mediterranean, North Africa, and perhaps most crucially, in the Battle of the Atlantic.

Winterbotham's account has been criticized[by whom?] for inaccuracies and self-aggrandizement. Winterbotham acknowledged in the book that he was no cryptologist, had only slight understanding of the cryptologic side of the multi-faceted and strictly compartmentalized Ultra operation, and had no access to official records so was written from memory.[8] His description of the pioneering work done by Poland's Cipher Bureau before the war is minimal. Winterbotham later responded that he had simply passed on the story that he had been given at the time. He erroneously suggested that Japan's PURPLE cipher machine was a version of the German Enigma and confused "Dilly" Knox with a different person.

Noted in the book is the myth of Winston Churchill and the Coventry Blitz. During The Blitz of 1940–1941, Coventry was severely bombed by the Luftwaffe on the night of 14–15 November. There was heavy damage and numerous civilian casualties. Winterbotham asserted that Enigma decrypts had provided clear advance warning of the raid but that Churchill personally decided not to take any special countermeasures that might alert the Germans that the British were reading Enigma. This story has been widely repeated, even though it has been refuted by other historians and memoirists.[citation needed] Peter Calvocoressi was head of the Air Section at Bletchley Park that translated and analysed all decrypted Luftwaffe messages. He wrote that "Ultra never mentioned Coventry... Churchill, so far from pondering whether to save Coventry or safeguard Ultra, was under the impression that the raid was to be on London."[9]

Winterbotham concluded that the war's outcome "was, in fact, a very narrow shave, and the reader may like to ponder [...] whether or not we might have won had we not had Ultra".

Role in enabling the "Dambusters" raid

James Holland credits [10] Winterbotham with responding to a letter from Barnes Wallis with a desperate cry for assistance ("help oh help") with a letter of his own, in February 1943. Winterbotham's letter ensured the chief of the air staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal, knew of the Wallis plan, and took a favourable view of it. Portal overrode the resistance of Sir Arthur Harris, head of Bomber Command, to Wallis' proposal, and the Dambusters raid, code-named Operation Chastise in May 1943, was approved.

Publications

Before and after The Ultra Secret, Winterbotham wrote several other books dealing with various aspects of his intelligence work.

  • Winterbotham, Frederick. Secret and Personal. London, 1969.
  • Winterbotham, Frederick. The Ultra Secret. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1974. ISBN 0-297-76832-8. Also London: Futura, 1975, ISBN 0-86007-268-1.
  • Winterbotham, Frederick. The Nazi Connection. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1978. ISBN 0-297-77458-1.
  • Winterbotham, Frederick. The Ultra Spy: An Autobiography. London: Macmillan, 1989. ISBN 0-333-51425-4.

References

  1. ^ Frederick William Winterbotham - Mitchell Families Online.
  2. ^ Winterbotham 1974, pp. 3, 4.
  3. ^ Winterbotham, Frederick William at www.stroud-history.org.uk
  4. ^ a b Winterbotham, Frederick. The Nazi Connection. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1978. ISBN 0-297-77458-1.
  5. ^ Staerck, Chris; Sinnott, Paul. Luftwaffe: The Allied Intelligence Files. Brassey's, 2002. p. 3
  6. ^ Néstor Cerdá, The Road to Dunkirk: British Intelligence and the Spanish Civil Wr. footnote 63, p.67
  7. ^ a b c d Winterbotham 1974, pp. 19–24.
  8. ^ Winterbotham 1974, p. vii.
  9. ^ Calvocoressi, Peter (1981). Top Secret Ultra. New York: Ballantine Books. pp. 85–86. ISBN 0-345-30069-6.
  10. ^ Uni Huddersfield Repository Research Videos (26 July 2013). "James Holland, Dambusters Raid lecture 'The Dams Raid -- A Reassessment' - Univ of Huddersfield". Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 – via YouTube.

External links

  • Imperial War Museum Interview

winterbotham, other, uses, winterbotham, frederick, william, winterbotham, april, 1897, january, 1990, british, royal, force, officer, latterly, group, captain, during, world, supervised, distribution, ultra, intelligence, book, ultra, secret, first, popular, . For other uses see Winterbotham Frederick William Winterbotham CBE 16 April 1897 28 January 1990 was a British Royal Air Force officer latterly a Group Captain who during World War II supervised the distribution of Ultra intelligence His book The Ultra Secret was the first popular account of Ultra to be published in Britain F W WinterbothamF W Winterbotham in Royal Flying Corps uniformBirth nameFrederick William WinterbothamBorn 1897 04 16 16 April 1897Stroud Gloucestershire EnglandDied28 January 1990 1990 01 28 aged 92 Blandford Dorset EnglandAllegiance United KingdomService wbr branch British Army Royal Air ForceYears of service1914 1918 1939 1946RankGroup CaptainBattles warsWorld War I World War IIAwardsCommander of the British Empire CBE Other workauthor Contents 1 Family and education 2 World War I service 3 Between the wars 4 Ultra 5 The Ultra Secret 6 Role in enabling the Dambusters raid 7 Publications 8 References 9 External linksFamily and education EditHe was born in Stroud Gloucestershire the younger child and only son of Frederick Winterbotham solicitor and his wife Florence Vernon Graham He was educated at Charterhouse School in Godalming Surrey He married four times Erica Horniman 1921 daughter of Frederick John Horniman tea trader and MP Madge Mary Moncrieff Anderson 1939 Joan Petrea Trant 1948 and Kathleen Price 1987 1 World War I service EditAt the start of the war in 1914 he enlisted in the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars Yeomanry but in 1916 they lost their horses and were to be supplied with bicycles or transferred to infantry So he transferred to the Royal Flying Corps in 1916 and became a fighter pilot He was shot down and captured on 13 July 1917 being shot down in a dogfight in Passchendaele by a member of the Richtofen Geschwader He spent the rest of the war as a prisoner and passed the time learning German For much of the time he was in the Holzminden prisoner of war camp 2 Between the wars EditUpon his release in 1918 he went to Christ Church Oxford to study law He took a law degree 1920 in the shortened course for returning servicemen 3 but had no liking for an office job He pursued farming opportunities in Britain Kenya and Rhodesia without success By 1929 he was back in Britain and considered becoming a stockbroker in the City Instead he was recruited to join the staff of the Royal Air Force where he was assigned to the newly created Air Section of the Secret Intelligence Service MI 6 4 During the next few years Winterbotham began the process of building up an intelligence service for the RAF His job was to gather information on the development of military aviation in hostile or potentially hostile countries He recruited agents and filed and analyzed their reports One of these reports revealed that Germany had secret arrangements with the Soviet Union for the training of military pilots in violation of the Treaty of Versailles William de Ropp the agent who supplied this information also informed Winterbotham that the Nazis not yet in power wanted to cultivate high level contacts in Britain they imagined that imperialist Britain would be sympathetic to their own dreams of racial conquest Winterbotham who was socially well connected seemed a likely channel 4 This led to a visit by Nazi philosopher Alfred Rosenberg in 1932 Winterbotham with the full knowledge of MI 6 escorted Rosenberg around Britain made some appropriate introductions and played up to him Neither Ropp nor Rosenberg knew that Winterbotham had any intelligence connections he was just a civilian official of the Air Staff Winterbotham continued in this role for the next seven years He became a regular visitor to Germany and an apparent Nazi sympathizer As such he was welcomed into the highest circles in Germany meeting Hitler and Goring and with Goring s Luftwaffe subordinates such as Erhard Milch and Albert von Kesselring He gathered a tremendous amount of information on the Luftwaffe and on German political and military intentions 5 It seems he was also involved in an observer mission with General Franco s fascist forces in the Spanish Civil War A report written by a William Winterbotham dated 16 February 1937 filed in AIR 40 224 provides highly technical analysis of events that reflected his professional military experience It was read by a member of the Air Intelligence Staff on 26 September 1937 6 In 1938 Winterbotham recruited Sidney Cotton to carry out some very successful aerial reconnaissance over Italy and Germany in 1939 40 in a private Lockheed 12A aircraft Ultra EditThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message These activities came to an end when World War II broke out in 1939 As a top ranking member of MI6 he reported directly to its head Sir Hugh Sinclair and his successor in 1940 Sir Stewart Menzies Winterbotham was fully aware of Britain s successful code breaking operation against the German Enigma cipher machine The intelligence derived from Enigma decrypts was absolutely authentic as the decrypted messages were genuine German communications and it was often of immense value This source was so valuable it was given the special classification Top Secret Ultra or simply Ultra In April 1940 the cryptographers at Bletchley Park made a breakthrough when they succeeded in deciphering four small messages regarding Luftwaffe personnel This led Winterbotham to consider how the information from this would be handled once it became more plentiful and he shared his ideas on this topic with his Chief His chief gave him permission to set up a completely new organisation for the translation distribution and complete security of the decoded signals A key part of the solution was arranging for the secure delivery of Ultra to the various commanders and making sure that they did nothing to give away the secret that Enigma was being read Winterbotham took charge of this process He formed Special Liaison Units which were attached to each field headquarters that received Enigma 7 An SLU consisted of a few RAF officers and enlisted men low in rank to avoid drawing attention They received Ultra messages by radio from Britain carefully encrypted in Britain s strongest cipher They decrypted the messages and handed them over to the commander who was often the only person cleared to know where the information came from At some HQs there might be one or two deputies also cleared The SLU was expected to retrieve the Ultra message after the commander had read it and keep it under lock and key 7 The SLU was also expected to keep the recipient commander from telling anyone else about the origins of the message or acting too obviously on its contents Naturally this sometimes led to conflicts with field commanders who objected to being second guessed After the U S entered the war these field commanders were often not British 7 Winterbotham was responsible for recruiting and training the SLU personnel for this difficult role They had to be very able technically be close mouthed keep a low profile and also be diplomatic enough to manage commanders who far outranked them When diplomacy failed Winterbotham flew out to the problem HQ to resolve the quarrel He had the ultimate authority of the Allied governments behind him as both Britain and the U S would do almost anything to avoid exposing the secret of the decryptions 7 The Ultra Secret EditUltra remained secret even after the war Then in 1974 Winterbotham s book The Ultra Secret was published This was the first book in English about Ultra and it explained what Ultra was and revealed Winterbotham s role particularly with regard to the dissemination and use of Ultra There had been mentions of Enigma decryption in earlier books by Wladyslaw Kozaczuk Ladislas Farago and Gustave Bertrand However Winterbotham s book was the first extensive account of the uses to which the massive volumes of Enigma derived intelligence were put by the Allies on the western and eastern European fronts in the Mediterranean North Africa and perhaps most crucially in the Battle of the Atlantic Winterbotham s account has been criticized by whom for inaccuracies and self aggrandizement Winterbotham acknowledged in the book that he was no cryptologist had only slight understanding of the cryptologic side of the multi faceted and strictly compartmentalized Ultra operation and had no access to official records so was written from memory 8 His description of the pioneering work done by Poland s Cipher Bureau before the war is minimal Winterbotham later responded that he had simply passed on the story that he had been given at the time He erroneously suggested that Japan s PURPLE cipher machine was a version of the German Enigma and confused Dilly Knox with a different person Noted in the book is the myth of Winston Churchill and the Coventry Blitz During The Blitz of 1940 1941 Coventry was severely bombed by the Luftwaffe on the night of 14 15 November There was heavy damage and numerous civilian casualties Winterbotham asserted that Enigma decrypts had provided clear advance warning of the raid but that Churchill personally decided not to take any special countermeasures that might alert the Germans that the British were reading Enigma This story has been widely repeated even though it has been refuted by other historians and memoirists citation needed Peter Calvocoressi was head of the Air Section at Bletchley Park that translated and analysed all decrypted Luftwaffe messages He wrote that Ultra never mentioned Coventry Churchill so far from pondering whether to save Coventry or safeguard Ultra was under the impression that the raid was to be on London 9 Winterbotham concluded that the war s outcome was in fact a very narrow shave and the reader may like to ponder whether or not we might have won had we not had Ultra Role in enabling the Dambusters raid EditJames Holland credits 10 Winterbotham with responding to a letter from Barnes Wallis with a desperate cry for assistance help oh help with a letter of his own in February 1943 Winterbotham s letter ensured the chief of the air staff Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal knew of the Wallis plan and took a favourable view of it Portal overrode the resistance of Sir Arthur Harris head of Bomber Command to Wallis proposal and the Dambusters raid code named Operation Chastise in May 1943 was approved Publications EditBefore and after The Ultra Secret Winterbotham wrote several other books dealing with various aspects of his intelligence work Winterbotham Frederick Secret and Personal London 1969 Winterbotham Frederick The Ultra Secret London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1974 ISBN 0 297 76832 8 Also London Futura 1975 ISBN 0 86007 268 1 Winterbotham Frederick The Nazi Connection London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1978 ISBN 0 297 77458 1 Winterbotham Frederick The Ultra Spy An Autobiography London Macmillan 1989 ISBN 0 333 51425 4 References Edit Frederick William Winterbotham Mitchell Families Online Winterbotham 1974 pp 3 4 sfn error no target CITEREFWinterbotham1974 help Winterbotham Frederick William at www stroud history org uk a b Winterbotham Frederick The Nazi Connection London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1978 ISBN 0 297 77458 1 Staerck Chris Sinnott Paul Luftwaffe The Allied Intelligence Files Brassey s 2002 p 3 Nestor Cerda The Road to Dunkirk British Intelligence and the Spanish Civil Wr footnote 63 p 67 a b c d Winterbotham 1974 pp 19 24 sfn error no target CITEREFWinterbotham1974 help Winterbotham 1974 p vii sfn error no target CITEREFWinterbotham1974 help Calvocoressi Peter 1981 Top Secret Ultra New York Ballantine Books pp 85 86 ISBN 0 345 30069 6 Uni Huddersfield Repository Research Videos 26 July 2013 James Holland Dambusters Raid lecture The Dams Raid A Reassessment Univ of Huddersfield Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 via YouTube External links EditImperial War Museum Interview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title F W Winterbotham amp oldid 1128689083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.