Rare Alan Turing notebook to be sold

Document expected to fetch $1m at auction gives insight into mind of Nazi-code breaker

Alan Turing never received credit for his work during World War Two and took his own life in 1954 while receiving hormone treatment after being charged with homosexuality, which was then a crime.
Alan Turing never received credit for his work during World War Two and took his own life in 1954 while receiving hormone treatment after being charged with homosexuality, which was then a crime.

A notebook about mathematics and computer science written by Nazi-code breaker Alan Turing, played by actor Benedict Cumberbatch in the Oscar-nominated film The Imitation Game, is to be sold at auction.

The 56-page manuscript is expected to fetch at least seven figures, with a portion of the proceeds going to charity, when it goes up for sale on April 13th in New York.

Turing was a British genius mathematician and a pioneer in computer science who hastened the end of World War Two by cracking Germany’s wartime communications code.

In the notebook, which has never been seen in public and dates from 1942, Turing works on the foundations of computer science and mathematics.

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"This manuscript dates from the time when Turing was engaged in the crucial task of breaking the Enigma Code," said Cassandra Hatton, senior specialist in fine books and manuscripts at Bonhams auction house.

“Its mathematical content gives an extraordinary insight into the working mind of one of the greatest luminaries of the 20th Century,” she added in a statement.

Turing never received credit for his work during World War Two and took his own life in 1954 while receiving hormone treatment after being charged with homosexuality, which was then a crime. He was pardoned 60 years later.

He left the notebook to his friend Robin Gandy, who inscribed his own musings between the pages of Turing's notes. Gandy kept the notebook hidden until his death.

Cumberbatch, an Academy Award best actor nominee for his portrayal of Turing, described him as a gay icon who lived during a time of intolerance.

“His impact on our everyday lives is enormous, and the thought of being able to hold a manuscript that was written by him is thrilling,” he said in a statement.