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For the first time, the inside story of the brilliant American engineer who defeated Enigma and the Nazi code-masters
Much has been written about the success of the British “Ultra” program in cracking the Germans’ Enigma code early in World War II, but few know what really happened in 1942, when the Germans added a fourth rotor to the machine that created the already challenging naval code and plunged Allied intelligence into darkness. 
Enter one Joe Desch, an unassuming but brilliant engineer at the National Cash Register Company in Dayton, Ohio, who was given the task of creating a machine to break the new Enigma settings. It was an enterprise that rivaled the Manhattan Project for secrecy and complexity–and nearly drove Desch to a breakdown. Under enormous pressure, he succeeded in creating a 5,000-pound electromechanical monster known as the Desch Bombe, which helped turn the tide in the Battle of the Atlantic–but not before a disgruntled co-worker attempted to leak information about the machine to the Nazis.
After toiling anonymously–it even took his daughter years to learn of his accomplishments–Desch was awarded the National Medal of Merit, the country’s highest civilian honor. In The Secret in Building 26, the entire thrilling story of the final triumph over Enigma is finally told.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
- Sales Rank: #244872 in Books
- Published on: 2004-04-20
- Released on: 2004-04-20
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.51" h x .99" w x 6.35" l,
- Binding: Hardcover
- 304 pages
 From Booklist 
 The Ultra secret (Allied decryption of German messages during World War II) has produced a growing body of literature since it was revealed 30 years ago, indicative not only of steady interest in the topic but also of the fact that it still retains its own secrets. DeBrosse and Burke benefit from the former, and make fascinating disclosures of the latter, in their account of the machines, called "bombes," that broke the German encryption tool, Enigma. Due to wartime exigencies, the construction of bombes, first built by the British, shifted to the NCR Company in Dayton, Ohio. On the technical side, the authors detail problems in building them and the ensuing strain placed on NCR's man in charge. On the intelligence side, DeBrosse and Burke dramatically recount a crisis generated by a complication added to Enigma in 1942 that, for the moment, thwarted Ultra and gained U-boats the upper hand. In addition to narrating NCR's literal life-and-death performance, the authors uncover an espionage affair within company ranks. This is an important new angle on Ultra. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved 
 Review 
 “A well-documented, objective account . . . It needs to be read . . . by those who want to understand the indispensable role of information technology in modern warfare.”
–The Washington Post Book World
From the Trade Paperback edition. 
 Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 
 Chapter 1
Building the Perfect Machine
March 1943-Dayton, Ohio
In a secure meeting room inside NCR's Building 26, while  shotgun-toting Marines stood guard outside, chief engineer Joe Desch  grew increasingly impatient as he listened to one staff member after  another report on continuing glitches with the two prototypes of the  U.S. Bombe, Adam and Eve. After enough bad news, Desch resorted to  what was becoming an all-too-familiar motivational technique among  his hard-pressed group of seventeen engineers and technicians. He  jumped out of his seat and onto the meeting-room table and began  pounding his fist into his hand with every word he shouted. "No more  excuses! We've got to work harder, faster, smarter! Everybody's ass  is on the line!"
What Desch couldn't tell his staff, and what had been pointed out to  him repeatedly by his own Navy supervisors, was that too many ships  were going down, too many men were dying at sea, while the team  failed to produce a working codebusting machine that had been  promised for delivery to the Navy three months before.
Because of the project's ironclad security, Desch's staff was not  permitted to utter even among themselves the words "Enigma" or  "Bombe" or the seemingly innocuous name for the top secret operation,  "U.S. Naval Computing Machine Laboratory." The project was  self-contained within NCR's former night-school building, constructed  seven years before on a large, open tract that had once served as the  city dump. Behind the building, on a lonely spur of railroad track,  sat an empty baggage car with an overdue delivery date to Washington,  D.C.-the Navy's not very subtle way of reminding the project's  managers that the top brass was impatient for results.
But OP20G, the Navy unit in charge of analyzing and decoding enemy  radio communications, may have been asking for the impossible. As  late as August of 1942, the Americans still had high hopes that an  all-electronic decoding machine-at least one hundred times faster  than anything built before-would be able to crunch through more than  four hundred thousand possible Enigma solutions in the unheard-of  time of fifty-five seconds.
 From those wildly optimistic expectations, the American team  plummeted two months later into a misinformed pessimism. Desch then  thought his best possible Bombe might take hours to complete a run of  all the Enigma possibilities, not just a few seconds, and that the  Navy would need 336 of the sophisticated machines to get the job  done. A big part of the problem was that the Americans had still not  mastered the information the British were supplying about all the  challenges in the Shark system, nor did they know all of Bletchley  Park's clever methods in attacking them.
For the Navy and Desch, the race was on, not only against the Germans  and the U-boats in the Atlantic but in some ways against the British.  The Americans knew that Bletchley Park was working on its own design  for a four-wheel Bombe and that their careers, their nation's  prestige, and the Navy's investment of millions of dollars and scores  of highly skilled personnel were at risk if they failed to arrive  first at a working machine.
The designing engineers in both countries were under enormous  pressures: they were told that only a perfect machine-one that was  fast enough, reliable enough, and could be produced in sufficient  numbers quickly enough-would be able to turn the Battle of the  Atlantic. What was needed was a high-speed machine that could  complete each of its runs without a single mistake. The codebreaking  method it embodied could not tolerate even one missed connection, one  electrical spike, or a tiny slip of its gearing.
Navy theoreticians had envisioned an all-electronic machine, using  thousands of Desch's fast-firing miniature tubes, that would leave  the more mechanical British three-wheel design clanking far behind.
In the end, the weight of the Navy's demands-and the nation's-fell  most heavily on one man's shoulders: those of thirty-five-year-old  Joseph R. Desch, NCR's chief of electrical research.
from the front steps of Building 26, Desch could have looked out  across South Patterson Boulevard to the steep, grassy banks of the  Great Miami River, in which he had swum and fished as a child, and  across the river to his roots in Edgemont, the working-class  neighborhood where his German-immigrant mother, Augusta Stoermer  Desch, and most of his relatives still lived. Desch's escape route to  a new life had been the Stewart Street Bridge, the link from Edgemont  to Dayton that crossed Patterson Boulevard just a few yards north of  Building 26. As a college student living at home, he had crossed the  bridge countless times on his beat-up Henderson motorcycle, traveling  to and from classes at the University of Dayton campus, a mile  farther east on Stewart Street, until the freezing winter morning he  hit a patch of ice on the bridge, spun out of control, and crashed.  Though not gravely injured, he never again mounted a motorcycle.
Like the machine he was charged with engineering in late 1942, Desch  was complex and temperamental. He was a devout Catholic, a heavy  after-hours drinker and a chain-smoker considerate enough to confine  his habit to his own office. He loved to use his hands as much as his  brain. He delighted in gardening, in chopping wood, and, even in his  teen years, in designing and making his own glass-blown gas tubes for  his many electronic exploits. He could be brash and irreverent and  had a temper that, when triggered, could propel a torrent of harsh  invective. But he also had a gentle side that shrank from physical  violence-a trait that had kept him from seeing war as anything but "a  damned, dirty business."
Although he passed his childhood days like an early twentieth-century  Huck Finn, canoeing and camping and fishing along the banks of the  Great Miami, he was never interested in hunting like the rest of his  young friends. He couldn't bring himself to kill-not even, according  to his daughter, Debbie Anderson, the rabbits his father had asked  him to raise. "He loved taking care of the rabbits and building the  hutch and all, but when it came time to do what he had to do with  them, he couldn't do it," she said. "I don't know if he sold them or  gave them away, but they ended up with a friend."
Born in 1907, four years after Orville and Wilbur Wright took their  first flight and fewer than ten blocks from the bicycle shop where  the brothers had built their first airplane, Desch was the only son  of his mother and a Dayton wagon maker, Edward Frank Desch. On his  days off from school, young Desch often visited his father at his  wagon-making shop, which the Great Depression later forced into  closure. His father was a quiet, modest man who never raised his  voice with his son and two younger daughters. Desch's mother was the  disciplinarian as well as the outgoing, social half of the couple,  well-known and liked by everyone in the neighborhood, including the  Italian family across the street who ran a bootleg winery during  Prohibition and often stored their casks in the Desch basement  whenever a police raid was imminent.
Desch would have been content to go to the local cooperative high  school and, after graduation, enter a skilled trade like his  father's. But his mother and his Marianist instructors at Emmanuel  Elementary recognized his greater gifts and pushed him toward the  preparatory school at the local Catholic college, the University of  Dayton. The deciding factor, however, may have been the influence of  his lifelong friend Mike Moran, who got Desch a job as an usher at  the Victory Theatre when they were both sixteen. Desch's exposure to  national touring acts at the Victory, including the Ziegfeld Follies,  vaudevillians, and opera companies, opened his eyes to a much wider  world.
Thanks to NCR and the vision of its eccentric founder and business  pioneer, John H. Patterson, much of the world had come to Dayton in  those years. Patterson had bought the rights to one of the first  cash-register machines in 1884 and then set about persuading the  entire business world it couldn't live without them. His  determination to build NCR into a world-class industrial  organization, dominant in manufacturing, marketing, and research,  drew to Dayton the likes of Edward Deeds and automotive genius  Charles F. "Boss" Kettering.
Patterson epitomized the bold thinking and odd quirks of the men  whose leadership ushered America into the twentieth century. Growing  up on his father's sprawling farm outside of Dayton, Patterson
was desperately eager to be a businessman, and almost as desperately  ignorant of what businessmen did. He decided to follow his own best  advice, creating thereby most of the forms of American  merchandising-the trained salesman, the sales territory, the quota  and the annual convention. . . . There may today be captains of  industry who, like John Patterson, take four baths a day, wear  underwear made from pool table felt and sleep with their heads  hanging off the side of the bed so they may avoid rebreathing their  just exhaled breath, but if there are, they keep pretty damn quiet  about it.
Patterson also was an extremely visual man, perhaps ahead of his  times. He was fanatical about recording every detail of his company's  growth and operations. The NCR Archive in Dayton today contains some  four million images from around the world, stretching back to the  early 1900s.
Ironically, among the images of Dayton's early street life are two  pictures of a young, barefoot Joe Desch-one of him shooting craps in  an alleyway and another of him shimmying his hand up a baseball bat  against another urchin to see whose team would take the field first  in an overgrown sandlot. The pictures make clear that Desch had grown  up in a rough-and-tumble neighborhood. But true to his mother's  dreams, young Desch never neglected his schoolwork. He had been an  altar boy and a straight-A student at Emmanuel, yet enough of a  troublemaker to have punched and knocked down one of his instructors  in a dispute over a math solution. Still, he managed to earn a  scholarship from the Marianists to the university's preparatory high  school. He went on to work his way through the university and  graduate in 1929 with honors in electrical engineering.
His professional career began inauspiciously enough, running the  tube-testing laboratory at Dayton Electric. He lost that job in 1933  in the midst of the Great Depression, after General Motors Radio  bought out the company and consolidated its operations. Desch became  a freelance inventor and engineer, working out of his parents'  basement and turning into hardware mostly other people's ideas, some  sillier than others, including a washing machine that generated sound  waves to pulverize dirt from clothes. Unfortunately, the machine  vibrated so much, its buttons kept falling off.
A chance encounter led to another important job. Desch was building a  radio for a client in the basement of the client's home when Boss  Kettering, the inventor of the automobile ignition system and the  dean of American industrial engineers at the time, happened to walk  in and observe him. Kettering didn't say a word as Desch worked, but  the elder scientist was impressed enough with the young engineer to  offer him a job at his Telecom Laboratories, where Desch later helped  develop new radio and wire teletype equipment. But Desch lost that  job, too, when the entire company was purchased by IBM in 1935.
Desch was officially unemployed, living off his meager savings, when  he met and married Dorothy Brockman in the summer of 1935. They went  off on their honeymoon, a car tour of the western United States with  the obligatory stop at the Grand Canyon, knowing that Desch would  have only a part-time teaching job at the university when they  returned.
Desch's big break came later that same year when Harry M. Williams,  chief of research at Frigidaire, hired Desch as a laboratory foreman.  Williams, in turn, was later hired by Colonel Deeds to head the  research division at NCR, where Desch followed and was given the task  of launching the company's new electrical-research lab. Deeds and  Williams gave Desch the freedom and the resources to be a true  innovator. The year was 1938, and Desch was just thirty-one.
In the three years before the war, Desch built a national reputation  for his work at NCR in designing miniature, fast-firing gas tubes no  bigger than a thumbnail. These were the microchips of the 1940s and  the basis for electronic calculators of the era. In the late 1930s  and early 1940s, Desch and his staff designed and patented the first  electronic accounting machine-capable of operating at one million  pulses per second, at least one hundred times faster than any device  had achieved before. Although it was not programmable and never went  into production, the Desch calculator was on a par with the best work  at IBM and was an important step toward the modern computer.
It was during this period, too, that Desch earned the admiration of  MIT's Vannevar Bush, whom Deeds had retained as a research adviser  for NCR. By the time the Navy had come to Desch with the Bombe  project in August 1942, he had already contributed heavily to the war  effort; unknown to him at the time, his electronic counter would be  used in developing the first atom bomb. His inventions for Bush and  the National Defense Research Committee included a remote detonator,  a superfast "flash" communications system, and an electronic means of  screening aircraft known as the IFF (Identity Friend or Foe) system.  In a private letter to Desch in December 1942, Bush informed him of  the success of one invention, perhaps the remote detonator: "It can  now be told, within our own group, that new devices developed through  the close collaboration between the services and the NDRC, have  recently been used in combat with the enemy and have not been found  wanting."
Unlike the Navy's theoretical engineers and mathematicians, who were  mostly graduate students and professors at prestigious universities,  Desch had earned his engineering and managerial stripes on the  factory floor. He had become as savvy about front-office politics as  he was knowledgeable about state-of-the-art electronics. Even the  Navy's more academic engineers soon came to respect Desch's  hard-nosed, practical advice, though they didn't entirely understand  his factory milieu. In the late 1930s, when Desch took Dorothy to  Cambridge to meet the MIT crowd, she was startled when graduate  students at the welcoming cocktail party greeted her husband as "Dr.  Desch." Desch made no effort to correct them, realizing that in  academic circles it was incomprehensible that a man of his stature  would not have a Ph.D. 
Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
 Boring 
 By Harro 
Plodding, poorly written. An interesting piece of history made dull reading.About the only interesting thing in it is the lack of brains of the military leadership  - but then, we know that "military intelligence is an oxymoron.
13 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
 The Codebreakers of Dayton, Ohio 
 By Celia Redmore 
Until now too little has been said about the contributions of Americans towards decrypting either German ?Enigma? or Japanese ?Purple? ciphers. From 1941 until the end of the war the Americans and British collaborated ? in a sometimes prickly relationship ? with the desperate task of deciphering the messages sent between German U-boats in the North Atlantic and Grossadmiral Karl D?nitz, commander-in-chief of the German Navy. Fortunately for the allies, the admiral liked to keep in close touch with his fleet of U-boats, providing a steady stream of messages with clues to the U-boats? position and intentions.
In 1939, with Germany threatening to invade Poland, the Polish had turned over to their British and French allies all the work they had done during the previous nine years on the ciphers generated by a machine called an ?Enigma? that the Germans used to send secret messages. The Polish artifacts included a mechanical device called a ?bomba kryptologiczna?, or ?bombe? in French. In response, the British set up a Code and Cypher School (note the British spelling of cipher) at Bletchley Park. That story has been well told many times and the contributions of at least some of the men and women who served there ? most notably the mathematician Alan Turing ? have been publicly recognized.
In the United States much of the code breaking was done in Dayton, Ohio, by NCR in cooperation with the US Navy. The Bombes used in the US were designed and constructed in Building 26 under the leadership of engineer Joe Desch. Desch was one of many people who have never received proper acknowledgement for their work during the World War II because of the tight security surrounding their duties. Putting together their story has been a labor of love for Dayton reporter, Jim DeBrosse, and security historian Colin Burke. Be warned that there is very little about the technical aspects of Enigma encryption in ?The Secret in Building 26?, but there is a wealth of information about the men and women who worked ? often for years of long, hard days and under tremendous strain ? for the love of their country.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
 Alan Turing and the Imitation Game or Joe Desch and National Cash Register 
 By Jim Woodford 
With the current popularity of the Imitation Game about Alan Turing and the WWII codebreakers the Dayton Daily News ran an article speculating as to whether Joe Desch of Dayton and NCR fame would finally get his due. Actually, it was a rhetorical question, but the article mentioned the book The Secret in Building 26: The Untold Story of America's Ultra War Against the U-Boat Enigma Codes which more than gives Joe Desch his due. He took his war time secret to the grave but thankfully his grandson and his daughter developed a burning curiosity. It is a pretty amazing story at that, which addresses all aspects of the World War II era, both at home and on the battle front. Many say second only to the development of the atomic bomb in ending the war. One has to just shake their head and marvel at such a fantastic story. You will not be disappointed.
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