Cumann Seandalaíochta agus Staire na Gaillimhe

Galway Archaelogical and Historical Society


From Galway to Bletchley: The Secret Life of Emily Anderson OBE, Britain’s Greatest Female Codebreaker

Galway woman Emily Anderson may have appeared to the world as the epitome of ordinary, yet was in truth anything but. Born in 1891 as the daughter of the President of Queen’s College Galway, during World War I she was recruited to British intelligence to work as a codebreaker. So exceptional were her skills that she was one of the few women retained to work in intelligence during the interwar period, and subsequently served as a codebreaker at Bletchley Park and later Cairo, winning an OBE in the process. Though widely acknowledged as an exceptional musicologist – her translations of the Letters of Mozart and the Letters of Beethoven are classics to this day – her professional life as Britain’s greatest female codebreaker remained secret until the recent publication of her biography by Jackie Uí Chionna. In this lecture Dr. Uí Chionna will recall the remarkable life of the woman who earned herself the title “Queen of Codes”.


Dr. Jackie Uí Chionna teaches History at the University of Galway. Her biography of Emily Anderson, Queen of Codes: The Secret Life of Emily Anderson, Britain’s Greatest Female Codebreaker, was published by Headline UK in 2023. Her previous books include He Was Galway: Máirtín Mór McDonogh (Four Courts Press 2016) and An Oral History of University College Galway, 1930-1980: A University in Living Memory (Four Courts Press 2019). She is editor of the Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, and is currently an Associate Fellow at the Institute of Historical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London.

Date: Monday 11 March 2024
Time: 20:00/8pm
Venue: Harbour Hotel, Galway