Code breaker Alan Turing who helped win WW2 revealed as the new face of the plastic £50 note
MATHEMATICIAN Alan Turing who helped win the Second World War has been revealed as the new face of the £50 note.
The scientist was portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in the 2014 film The Imitation Game and was the Enigma code breaker responsible for decrypting Nazi messages - shortening the war by four years.
The new note will feature a photo of him taken in 1951 by Elliott & Fry, alongside a table of a mathematical formula which is widely credited as being the foundation for computer science.
Underneath Turing's picture he is quoted as saying: "This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of what is going to be."
He's the fifth person to be featured on the £50 note, replacing Matthew Boulton and James Watt, the brains behind the first steam engine, who've shared it since November 2011.
Before then, the first governor of the Bank of England Sir John Houblon took pride of place from 1994, and architect Sir Christopher Wren was featured on the notes from 1981.
The note will be made from polymer, the same material as other newer notes, including Sir Winston Churchill's £5 note and the Jane Austen £10.
Polymer notes last around two and-a-half times longer than paper ones and are harder to counterfeit, according to the Bank of England.
The note is expected to enter into circulation by the end of 2021.
Governor Mark Carney made the announcement this morning at the Science and Industry Museum in Manchester.
He said: "Alan Turing was an outstanding mathematician whose work has had an enormous impact on how we live today.
"As the father of computer science and artificial intelligence, as well as war hero, Alan Turing’s contributions were far ranging and path breaking. Turing is a giant on whose shoulders so many now stand."
Turing was awarded an OBE in 1945 but was charged for homosexual activity in 1952.
He pleaded for chemical castration by a series of injections of female hormones, which made him impotent.
He was also barred from continuing his work with GCHQ, despite all of his war efforts.
Turing died from cyanide poisoning in an apparent suicide, and 59 years later the mathematician was granted a posthumous royal pardon in 2013.
The Bank had received 227,299 nominations from members of the public during a six-week nomination period which closed in December.
This led to a list of 989 eligible names of people who are real, dead and have contributed to science in the UK.
Nineteenth century mathematician Ada Lovelace, eighteenth century engineer Charles Babbage, and physicist Stephen Hawking were among those shortlisted.
Last year, Treasury bosses decided to save the note after considering scrapping it due to money-laundering concerns.
How did Alan Turing's work help during the Second World War?
TURING was asked to join the Government Codes and Cypher School, a code-breaking organisation which is now known as GCHQ.
The organisation moved to Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, which became the top secret home of Britain’s code breakers.
He was based in the famous Hut 8 and his most notable achievement at Bletchley was cracking the Germans' ‘Enigma’ code.
The Enigma was a machine used by the German armed forces to send encrypted messages securely.
Together with fellow code-breaker Gordon Welchman, developed a machine called the Bombe which from late 1940 was decoding all messages sent by the Enigma machines.
Turing’s team also cracked complex German naval signals in 1941, contributing to Allied victory in the Battle of the Atlantic.
His other work included developing a machine to encode and decode voice communications.
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