
Julia Parsons, Navy code breaker during World War II, dies at 104
The Germans thought their machine was impenetrable. 'They just refused to believe that anyone could break their codes,' Thomas Perera, a former psychology professor at Montclair State University who collects Enigma machines and has an online museum devoted to them, said in an interview. 'Their submarines were sending their exact latitude and longitude every day.'
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
The unraveling of the Enigma puzzle began in the late 1930s, when Polish mathematicians, using intelligence gathered by French authorities, reverse-engineered the device and began developing the Bombe, a computer-like code-breaking machine. The Poles shared the information with British authorities.
Advertisement
In 1941, during an operation that was among the war's most closely held secrets, the Royal Navy captured a German submarine with an Enigma machine on board. British mathematician Alan Turing -- working secretly with intelligence services in England -- used it to refine the Bombe. British authorities sent instructions for building the Bombe to the US Navy.
Advertisement
At the Naval Communications Annex in Washington, Ms. Parsons and hundreds of other women used the Bombe to decipher German military radio transmissions, revealing information that was instrumental in shortening and winning the war, historians have said.
'We tried to figure out what the message was saying, then we drew up what we called a menu showing what we thought the letters were,' she told The Washington Post in 2022. 'That was fed into the computer, which then spat out all possible wheel orders for the day. Those changed every day and the settings changed twice a day, so we were constantly working on them.'
She joined the war effort in the summer of 1942, after reading a newspaper article about a new Navy program called Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service, or WAVES. 'There was nothing for women to do but sit at home and wait,' she told The Uproar, the student newspaper at North Allegheny Senior High School, in 2022. 'I knew I wasn't going to do that.'
More than 100,000 women joined the WAVES during the war. In 1943, she left Pittsburgh for officer training at Smith College, in Massachusetts, where she took courses on cryptology, physics, and naval history. After her training, she was sent to the Naval Communications Annex.
One day, an officer there asked if anyone could speak German. She had taken two years of the language in high school, so she raised her hand.
'They shot me off to the Enigma section immediately, and I began learning how to decode German U-boat message traffic on the job, Day 1,' Ms. Parsons said in an interview with the Veterans Breakfast Club, a nonprofit organization. 'Enemy messages arrived all day from all over the North Atlantic, plus the North Sea and the Bay of Biscay.'
Advertisement
Her cryptological handiwork saved some lives while simultaneously ending others, presenting her with a moral quandary as she parsed the day's messages.
She recalled decoding a congratulatory note transmitted to a German sailor following the birth of his son. His submarine was sunk a few days later.
'To think that we all had a hand in killing somebody did not sit well with me,' Ms. Parsons told the Post. 'That baby would never see his father.'
Still, she was proud to serve.
'This was a very patriotic time in the country,' she told HistoryNet in 2021. 'Everybody did something. Everybody was patriotic. It was a beautiful time for that kind of thing.'
Julia Mary Potter was born March 2, 1921, in Pittsburgh. Her father, Howard G. Potter, was a professor at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, now known as Carnegie Mellon University. Her mother, Margaret (Filbert) Potter, was a kindergarten teacher.
'Her family was always a puzzle family,' Ms. Parsons' daughter Barbara Skelton said in a 2013 interview with WESA, a public radio station in Pittsburgh. 'It's always crossword puzzles, jigsaw puzzles, so the fact that she was involved in decoding certainly makes perfect sense -- and she's very good at it.'
After graduating from Carnegie Tech in 1942, Ms. Parsons worked at an Army ordnance factory.
'We were checking gauges,' she told WESA. 'The steel mills were making shells and all that kind of ordnance equipment, and they were hiring all the Rosie the Riveters to work there, which was the first time women had been in the steel mills. It was considered very bad luck to have women in, so they did not accept Rosie gracefully.'
Advertisement
The WAVES program provided an escape -- a clandestine one. She told people she was doing office work for the government. She married in 1944, but didn't spill the secret even to her husband, Donald C. Parsons. She didn't tell their children, either.
In 1997, Ms. Parsons visited the National Cryptologic Museum near Washington, just another tourist interested in American history.
'The exhibits there astounded me,' she said in the Veterans Breakfast Club interview. 'Here was every sort of Enigma machine -- early models, late models -- on display for all to see, with detailed explanations of how they worked.'
She asked a tour guide why the machines were on display. The guide replied that the Enigma work had been declassified in the 1970s. Ms. Parsons hadn't known. She spent the rest of her life visiting classrooms and giving interviews, eager to tell her story.
'It's been good to break the silence,' she said. 'Good for me, and for history.'
In addition to Breines and Skelton, Ms. Parsons leaves a son, Bruce; eight grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. Her husband died in 2006.
Ms. Parsons had another distinction -- as perhaps the oldest Wordle player in the world. She played The New York Times puzzle every morning on her iPad and then texted the result to her children.
It was a sort of code.
'That's how we knew she was up and about,' Breines said in an interview. 'And if we didn't hear from her, we'd call and say, 'Where's your Wordle?''
This article originally appeared in
Advertisement
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
an hour ago
- Chicago Tribune
Today in History: First Little League Baseball game played
Today is Friday, June 6, the 157th day of 2025. There are 208 days left in the year. Today in history: On June 6, 1939, the first Little League Baseball game was played as Lundy Lumber defeated Lycoming Dairy 23-8 in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Also on this date: In 1844, the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) was founded in London. In 1889, an industrial accident sparked a devastating fire in Seattle, Washington, destroying 120 acres of the city center, including the majority of the city's commercial district and waterfront. In 1912, Novarupta, a volcano on the Alaska peninsula, began a three-day eruption, sending ash nearly 19 miles high; it was the most powerful volcanic eruption of the 20th century and the largest ever recorded in North America. In 1933, the first drive-in movie theater opened, in Camden, New Jersey. In 1944, during World War II, nearly 160,000 Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, on D-Day as they launched Operation Overlord to liberate German-occupied Western Europe. More than 4,400 Allied troops were killed on D-Day, including 2,501 Americans. In 1966, civil rights activist James Meredith was shot and wounded by a sniper on the second day of Meredith's march from Memphis, Tennessee, to Jackson, Mississippi, which he began to raise awareness of ongoing racial oppression in the South. (Meredith would recover from his injuries and was able to rejoin the march, which had grown from a small group of supporters to 15,000 marchers, the day before the group arrived in Jackson.) In 2015, American Pharoah became the first horse in 37 years to claim horse racing's Triple Crown, winning the Belmont Stakes by 5 ½ lengths. Today's Birthdays: Singer-songwriter Gary U.S. Bonds is 86. Civil rights activist Marian Wright Edelman is 86. Country musician Joe Stampley is 82. Olympic track & field gold medalist Tommie Smith is 81. Actor Robert Englund is 78. Folk singer Holly Near is 76. Sen. Sandra Bernhard is 70. Tennis Hall of Famer Bjorn Borg is 69. Comedian Colin Quinn is 66. Music producer Jimmy Jam is 66. Filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda is 63. Actor Jason Isaacs is 62. Actor Paul Giamatti is 58. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is 45. Actor Aubrey Anderson-Emmons (TV: 'Modern Family') is 18.

4 hours ago
D-Day veterans return to Normandy to mark 81st anniversary
OMAHA BEACH, France -- Veterans were gathering Friday on the beaches of Normandy to mark the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings — a pivotal moment of World War II that eventually led to the collapse of Adolf Hitler's regime. Tens of thousands of onlookers are expected to attend the commemorations, which include parachute jumps, remembrance ceremonies, parades, and historical re-enactments. Many will be there to cheer the ever-dwindling number of surviving veterans in their late 90s and older. All will remember the thousands who died. The June 6, 1944, D-Day invasion of Nazi-occupied France used the largest-ever armada of ships, troops, planes and vehicles to breach Hitler's defenses in western Europe. A total of 4,414 Allied troops were killed on D-Day itself. In the ensuing Battle of Normandy, 73,000 Allied forces were killed and 153,000 wounded. The battle — and especially Allied bombings of French villages and cities — killed around 20,000 French civilians. The exact German casualties are unknown, but historians estimate between 4,000 and 9,000 men were killed, wounded or missing during the D-Day invasion alone. 'The heroism, honor and sacrifice of the Allied forces on D-Day will always resonate with the U.S. Armed Forces and our Allies and partners across Europe,' said Lt. Gen. Jason T. Hinds, deputy commander of U.S. Air Forces in Europe – Air Forces Africa. 'So let us remember those who flew and fell. "Let us honor those who survived and came home to build a better world. And let us ensure that their sacrifice was not in vain by meeting today's challenges with the same resolve, the same clarity of purpose, and the same commitment to freedom.' Nearly 160,000 Allied troops landed on D-Day. Of those, 73,000 were from the United States and 83,000 from Britain and Canada. Forces from several other countries were also involved, including French troops fighting with Gen. Charles de Gaulle. The Allies faced around 50,000 German forces. More than 2 million Allied soldiers, sailors, pilots, medics and other people from a dozen countries were involved in the overall Operation Overlord, the battle to wrest western France from Nazi control that started on D-Day.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
This is County Durham's highest-rated chippy and it's 'better than Whitby'
Have you been to County Durham's highest-rated fish and chip shop on Google, praised by customers for being a 'proper' chippy? It could be your local. Battered and Fried located at 68 High Street in Carrville (DH1 1AT), boasts a 4.9/5-star rating on Google, from 251 reviews. The breakdown on Google Reviews shows the chippy has a majority of 5-star ratings, earning it the title of the highest-rated on Google when searching for 'best fish and chip shop in County Durham'. Someone who recently visited Battered and Fried shared: 'This place was recommended, I will never go anywhere else for my Fish and Chips. 'The cod was so fresh and white, coated in light golden batter. The chips were equally as fresh, crisp and golden. Freshly cooked and still hot when I got home, 10 minutes away. The staff were polite and friendly. Delicious.' Another claimed the fish and chips were 'even better than Whitby' as they posted: 'Called today I have had fish and chips from all over in my 80yrs today were the best I have had - even better than Whitby , Beautiful light batter very fresh white fish and gorgeous chips .my husband went in the shop said the staff were very good and friendly.' Meanwhile, one person who was visiting for the first time commented: 'Well it was our 1st time here for our fish and chips.... what can I say??....absolutely beautiful. We could not fault anything at all. I've worked and managed fish and chip shops over the years and not been a patch on these. Well done guys, we'll definitely be back soon x'. A fan of the chippy also said: 'A proper fish and chips shop! The fish and chips are great and the staff are all super friendly. I can see why they won the award for 'Best Fish and Chips in County Durham 2024!'' Recommended reading: Some of the award-winning County Durham fish and chip shops you need to try Darlington chip shop famed for its wide range of dishes in Echo top ten Darlington chippy crowned best in the UK at National Fish & Chip Awards 2025 Just some of the menu highlights (according to its Google profile) include an 8oz cod (£9), cod bites (£4.50), a fish butty (£6.80) and portion of chips 'peeled, washed and chipped every day from the finest British potatoes available' (£3.50), plus much more. Battered and Fried also offers portions of scampi fried in breadcrumbs and haddock too. Have you been to the highest-rated fish and chip shop on Google in County Durham? Let us know in the comments below (feel free to share recommendations for other top chippies in the area too).