Bletchley Park
During the Second World War, the English country house and estate Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes (Buckinghamshire) served as the main hub for Allied code-breaking. On the site of earlier structures of the same name, the mansion was built for the financier and politician Sir Herbert Leon in the years following 1883 in the Victorian Gothic, Tudor, and Dutch Baroque styles.
The home of the World War II Codebreakers, Bletchley Park, was once Britain's best-kept secret and is today a bustling heritage site where visitors can discover how the Codebreakers' astounding accomplishments helped cut the war by up to two years.
In recent years, interpretive exhibits and huts that have been recreated to look like they did during their wartime operations have been available at Bletchley Park, which is now open to the public. Every year, hundreds of thousands of people visit it. In Block H on the property, there is a separate National Museum of Computing, which houses a working reproduction of the Bombe machine and a refurbished Colossus computer.
Address: The Mansion, Bletchley Park, Sherwood Dr, Bletchley, Milton Keynes MK3 6EB, United Kingdom
Phone: +44 1908 640404
Established: 1992
Opening hours: 9:30AM–5PM
Rating: 4.7/5.0, 11,287 Google reviews
Website: https://bletchleypark.org.uk/