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Eric Malcolm Jones

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Sir Eric Malcolm Jones KCMG CB CBE (27 April 1907 – 24 December 1986) was a British intelligence officer who was director of the British signals intelligence agency, GCHQ from 1952 to 1960.[1]

Career

Hut 3 with a blast wall rebuilt by Bletchley Park Trust

Born in Buxton in Derbyshire and educated at King's School, Macclesfield only to age 15,[1][2] Jones spent the early part of his life as a manager in a Manchester textile factory.[3] He joined the Royal Air Force reserve in 1940 and was then posted to Bletchley Park in early 1942.[2] From April 1943, Jones was the head of Hut 3, which was responsible for intelligence on the Wehrmacht and Luftwaffe.[2] Unlike the better-known code breakers, Jones did not bring a background in mathematics or cryptography. During the early phases of D-Day preparations, "Jones was sent in to investigate and wrote a report recognising there needed to be a multi-services approach. It is a report that won the war in many ways," according to David Kenyon, research historian and author of the 2019 book Bletchley Park and D-Day. [1]

After the war, Jones was sent to Washington D.C. as representative of British Signals Intelligence.[2] He was made deputy director of GCHQ in 1950, and director from April 1952 until 1960.[2] Under Jones leadership, the intelligence material compiled by GCHQ was of significant benefit during the Suez Crisis of 1955; Jones received congratulations from Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd.[4]

In retirement he became a non-executive director of Simon Engineering.[2]

Accolades

In April 2019, additional information about Jones' work at Bletchley Park was revealed by David Kenyon, preliminary to an exhibition, starting on 2019 the anniversary of D-Day, that would highlight Jones's contribution leading up to events in June 1944. The exhibition, D-day: Interception, Intelligence, Invasion, details the preparations for the landings and reveals Jones’s essential interpretation and cataloguing system for the massive amounts of data from the team that was intercepting intelligence after cracking coded messages from the Germans using the Enigma machines. "Jones’s skill at putting together all the information coming in was crucial", said Kenyon.[5]

Peronel Craddock, Head of Collections and Exhibitions at Bletchley Park offered this comment in an interview: "We really can say that Jones, by leading his team inside Hut 3, was at least equally important to Turing in this part of the story. And there we are talking about someone recently declared by the BBC as Britain’s leading icon".[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Unsung Bletchley Park hero whose role in D-day was equal to Turing's". Guardian. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Jones, Sir Eric Malcolm (1907–1986), intelligence officer and administrator, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40175. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ R. A. Ratcliff, Delusions of Intelligence: Enigma, Ultra, and the End of Secure Ciphers, Cambridge University Press, 2006
  4. ^ Aldrich, Richard James (15 October 1998). Espionage, Security, and Intelligence in Britain, 1945-1970. Manchester: Manchester University Press. p. 55. ISBN 0719049563.
  5. ^ "Unsung Bletchley Park hero whose role in D-day was equal to Turing's". Guardian. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 8 April 2019. Jones was sent in to investigate and wrote a report recognising there needed to be a multi-services approach. It is a report that won the war in many ways," said Kenyon. "They asked him to stay on to implement his findings and then from around October and November they started to gear up for an invasion at some point.
  6. ^ "Unsung Bletchley Park hero whose role in D-day was equal to Turing's". Guardian. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 8 April 2019. Eric Jones is finally to be unmasked as the 'king of calm' in Hut 3 who channelled the work of the wartime codebreakers
Government offices
Preceded by Director of GCHQ
April 1952 – 1960
Succeeded by