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Henryk Zygalski 1908-1978

Henryk Michał Zygalski MPhil, MSc, DSc was a member of the Polish Cipher Bureau. He worked with Marian Rejewski and Jerzy Różycki to break the Enigma codes and lay the foundation for the work of Alan Turing and others at Bletchley Park. Their wartime achievements were the result of mathematical brilliance and outstanding personal bravery. Henryk Zygalski was one of the first mathematics lecturers at the University of Surrey.

1908    Born on 15 July in Posen, then part of the German Empire, now Poznań.

1918    Poland gains independence from Germany.

1923    Arthur Scherbius launches prototype Enigma machine.

1926    Undergraduate at Poznań University. Poland starts intercepting German Enigma messages.

1928    Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski selected for code-breaking course:
all were also fluent in German.

1931    Graduates with MPhil and all three work for Polish Cipher Bureau.

1932    Marian Rejewski reverse-engineers the Enigma machine, the first step towards
decrypting Enigma messages.

1938    Invents Zygalski sheets to predict Enigma machine settings.

1939    July: Polish cryptanalysts meet with British and French allies at Pyry near Warsaw
to share information and expertise.

1939 September: As the German army approaches Poland, the three  cryptanalysts leave Poland
for France
, via Romania and Italy and take up decoding Enigma near Paris in October.

1940    Turing meets with Rejewski, Różycki and Zygalski in Paris.
After France is invaded, the Poles fly to North Africa to get false identities.

1942    The Polish cryptanalysts return to Vichy, France.  Różycki is drowned en route.

1943    Zygalski and Rejewski escape into Spain; they are robbed and imprisoned but released.
They cross to Portugal to board a British naval ship to reach UK and join the Polish Signals Battalion
at Boxmoor, near Hemel Hempstead.

1945    World War II ends in Europe.
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1947    Polish University College established in Knightsbridge and Putney.
Zygalski is appointed to teach mathematics.

1951    Battersea Polytechnic takes over Putney Buildings.

1950    Zygalski is awarded London University MSc.

1954    Death of Alan Turing.

1966    Battersea Polytechnic becomes the University of Surrey and moves to Guildford.

1968    Zygalski suffers a stroke and retires. His speech is impaired.

1973    Evidence begins to emerge in Poland of involvement in code-breaking of Rejewski, Różycki and Zygalski.

1974    Role of Bletchley Park becomes known for the first time.

1977    Awarded DSc Honoris Causa by the Polish University Abroad.

1978    Dies in Liss, Hampshire on 30 August and is cremated in Chichester.

2000    With Rejewski, awarded Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta

2002    Memorial to Rejewski, Różycki and Zygalski unveiled at Bletchley Park.

2007    Monument to the three Polish cryptanalysts unveiled in Poznań Castle.

2014    With Rejewski and Różycki, given Milestone Award by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

2018    Memorial stone to Zygalski unveiled in Chichester Crematorium by the Polish Ambassador
and Dr Jeremy Russell (Zygalski’s nephew).

2026    Launch of Polish Navy’s signal intelligence ship ORP Henryk Zygalski.

 

There is a biography of Henryk Zygalski on St Andrew’s University website.