
A decorated World War Two code breaker who spent her youth deciphering enemy messages at Bletchley Park has died at the age of 101.
Charlotte “Betty” Webb MBE – who was among the last surviving Bletchley code breakers – died on Monday night, the Women’s Royal Army Corps Association confirmed.
Mrs Webb, from Wythall in Worcestershire, joined operations at the Buckinghamshire base at the age of 18, later going on to help with Japanese codes at The Pentagon in the US. She was awarded France’s highest honour – the Legion d’Honneur – in 2021.
The Women’s Royal Army Corps Association described Mrs Webb as a woman who “inspired women in the Army for decades”.
Speaking to the BBC in 2020, she said she had “never heard of Bletchley” before starting work there as a member of the ATS, the Auxiliary Territorial Service.
Her mother had taught her to speak German as a child and she said she was “taken into the mansion [at Bletchley] to read the Official Secrets Act”.
“I realised that from then on there was no way that I was going to be able to tell even my parents where I was and what I was doing until 1975 [when restrictions were lifted],” she recalled.

When the War ended in Europe in May of 1945, she went to work at the Pentagon after spending four years at Bletchley, which with its analysis of German communications had served as a vital cog in the Allies’ war machine.
There she would paraphrase and transcribe already-decoded Japanese messages. She said she was the only member of the ATS to be sent to Washington, describing it as a “tremendous honour”.
In 2021, Mrs Webb was one of 6,000 British citizens to receive the Légion d’Honneur, following a decision by President François Hollande in 2014 to recognise British veterans who helped liberate France.

In 2023, she and her niece were among 2,200 people from 203 countries invited to Westminster Abbey to see King Charles III’s coronation.
The same year she celebrated her 100th birthday at Bletchley Park with a party.
She and her guests were treated to a fly-past by a Lancaster bomber. She said at the time: “It was for me – it’s unbelievable isn’t it? Little me.”
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