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Celebrating Female Cryptologic Pioneers

Phyllis Latour Doyle: The Forgotten Spy Whose Knitting Helped Pave the Way for D-Day

Excerpted from Amightygirl.com

In May 1944, a 23-year-old British secret agent named Phyllis Latour Doyle parachuted into occupied Normandy to gather intelligence on Nazi positions in preparation for D-Day. As an agent for the British Special Operations Executive (SOE), Doyle – who recently celebrated her 98th birthday – secretly relayed 135 coded messages to the British military before France's liberation in August. She took advantage of the fact that the Nazi occupiers and their French collaborators were generally less suspicious of women, using the knitting she carried as a way to hide her codes. For seventy years, Doyle's contributions to the war effort were largely unheralded, but she was finally given her due in 2014 when she was awarded France's highest honor, the Chevalier of the Legion of Honour.

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AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CRYPTOLOGY

Learn about the pioneering contributions made by African Americans in cryptology & related fields.