IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Faulkner Drive, MILTON KEYNES, MK3 6FD

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Faulkner Drive, MK3 6FD by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (386 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Submarine model, Bletchley Park
Image: © Paul Shreeve Taken: 5 Feb 2011
0.04 miles
2
Exhibition Entrance, Bletchley Park Museum
The Exhibition houses many interesting and well documented relics of WWII - particularly cipher and 'code-breaking' machines - and also the fine statue of the mathematician and cryptanalyst, Alan Turing, shown here ... Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 31 Oct 2009
0.06 miles
3
Unrenovated huts and new development at Bletchley Park
Image: © Roger Davies Taken: 20 Apr 2013
0.06 miles
4
Churchill Display, Bletchley Park
Image: © Paul Shreeve Taken: 5 Feb 2011
0.08 miles
5
Cinema Museum and Churchill Displays, Bletchley Park
Image: © Paul Shreeve Taken: 5 Feb 2011
0.09 miles
6
Bletchley, Turing Gate
Image: © David Dixon Taken: 5 Sep 2016
0.11 miles
7
Bletchley Park: wartime huts
A collection of concrete huts that soon complemented the initial wooden ones.
Image: © Stephen Craven Taken: 12 Nov 2011
0.11 miles
8
Goose that laid the golden eggs statue, Bletchley Park
Churchill called Bletchley Park staff 'The goose that laid the golden eggs but never cackled'- their codebreaking in complete secrecy is credited with shortening the Second World War by at least two years.
Image: © Paul Shreeve Taken: 5 Feb 2011
0.11 miles
9
"Hut 8", Bletchley Park
Originally the home of the financier and Liberal MP, Sir Herbert Samuel Leon (1850–1926), the Bletchley Park estate passed out of the Leon family in 1937. During World War II the estate became the site of the UK's main decryption effort, becoming known as Station X. It was here that the codes and ciphers of several Axis countries were decrypted, most important being the ciphers generated by the German Enigma and Lorenz machines. Some 9,000 people were working at Bletchley Park at the height of the code-breaking efforts, many of the teams being housed in temporary huts designated by numbers - Hut 8, shown here, housed the Bletchley Park team tasked with breaking into German naval wireless traffic encrypted using the Enigma machine. See also. . . . Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 31 Oct 2009
0.11 miles
10
"Hut 8", Bletchley Park
Originally the home of the financier and Liberal MP, Sir Herbert Samuel Leon (1850–1926), the Bletchley Park estate passed out of the Leon family in 1937. During World War II the estate became the site of the UK's main decryption effort, becoming known as Station X. It was here that the codes and ciphers of several Axis countries were decrypted, most important being the ciphers generated by the German Enigma and Lorenz machines. Some 9,000 people were working at Bletchley Park at the height of the code-breaking efforts, many of the teams being housed in temporary huts designated by numbers - Hut 8, shown here, housed the Bletchley Park team tasked with breaking into German naval wireless traffic encrypted using the Enigma machine. See also . . . . Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 31 Oct 2009
0.11 miles
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