Wikipedia:Meetups/UK/WWII Women of Bletchley Park, March 2018
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WWII Women of Bletchley Park, Middlesex University in a nutshell:
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About the event
[edit]The event will focus on editing Wikipedia pages about the women who worked at Bletchley Park during World War II
- How do I prepare?
- Sign up
- Create a Wikipedia account - Special:UserLogin/signup
- Bring a laptop (wi-fi will be provided)
- Learn about editing if you like: Wikipedia:Tutorial, or Getting started on Wikipedia for more information
- Refreshments will be provided
Agenda
[edit]- 11:00 - how to edit Wikipedia
- 11:30 - editing
- 16:00 - finish
Trainers
[edit]Attendees
[edit]Please sign in below using ~~~~
Image adding exercise
[edit]Please go to WP:Shakyi.
Articles to be expanded
[edit]- Margaret Allan (racing driver), not much in her article about Bletchley, but little online either
- Jean Barker, Baroness Trumpington, could perhaps be more on Bletchley, she retires this month, aged 95
- Mavis Batey, decent article, but she was one of the leading codebreakers, so could be more
- Susan Elizabeth Black (born 1962), major role in saving Bletchley Park, comprehensive article, perhaps more could be added
- Audrey Ruth Briggs, very short article, probably much more could be added
- Christine Brooke-Rose, novelist and critic. Article mentions "worked at Bletchley Park as a WAAF in intelligence", but that is it. Needs expanding!
- Irene Brown, author and codebreaker, could be more on her time at Blecthley
- Joan Clarke, cryptanalyst and numismatist, briefly engaged to Alan Turing
- Rozanne Colchester, short bio, must be more to add!
- Dorrit Dekk, Czech-born British graphic designer, printmaker and painter. Only one sentence on her Bletchley Park work.
- Dorothy Du Boisson, needs rewriting and more references
- Diana Elles, Baroness Elles, almost nothing on her role as a codebreaker
- Jane Fawcett, codebreaker, singer, and heritage preservationist, could be expanded a bit
- Sigrid Augusta Green, short bio, needs fleshing out
- Gwen Hollington, uncited passing mention only - needs more work!
- Rosalind Hudson, could be expanded, needs more sources!
- Dorothy Hyson, American actress, passing mention only - needs more work!
- Eleanor Ireland, computer science pioneer, still alive?
- Barbara Mauritzen, short article, needs more references
- Cicely Mayhew, Britain's first woman diplomat, little on her Bletchley work
- Ann Katharine Mitchell, needs rearranging, and separate sections for "Early life" and "Personal life"
- Margaret Rock, mathematician, okay coverage, could be expanded
- Miriam Rothschild, scientist, "During the war, she worked at Bletchley Park on codebreaking" - needs expanding
- Mair Russell-Jones, she wrote a book, so bio could be expanded
- Joy Tamblin, Director of the Women's Royal Air Force from 1976 to 1980. "She worked at Bletchley Park between 1943 and 1945" - that's it.
- Jean Valentine, bombe operator, still involved today with the Bletchley Park Museum
New articles that could be started
[edit]- Ruth Bourne, bombe operator, just about enough to justify an article
- Hilary Brett-Smith, worked in Hut 8, married Harry Hinsley, might be enough for an article, but looks challenging
- Roma Davies born Roma Stenning, Telegraph article, quite a lot in The Debs of Bletchley Park and Other Stories online via Google Books
- Sheila Dunlop, later Sheila, Lady Killanin (and wife of Michael Morris, 3rd Baron Killanin, with some good info and sources on his page already), Hut 6, head of the registration room. Irish Times obituary
- Barbara Eachus born Barbara Abernethy, personal assistant to Alastair Denniston, became the British vice consul in Boston, Guardian coverage, Boston Globe obituary. Her husband Joseph Eachus is also notable, Telegraph obituary
- Peggy Erskine-Tulloch, bombe operator and instructor, might be enough for an article
- Lady Jean Fforde nee Lady Jean Graham, Scotsman obituary, Herald obituary, Times obituary
- Marigold Freeman-Attwood born Marigold Philips, Telegraph, audio interview, Mirror, wrote a few books too - might be enough
- Pamela Gibson later Pamela Rose, Article, Telegraph article, married to Jim Rose (journalist), should be enough
- Alison Robins (born Alison Gerrish), "Y service" listener, Telegraph obituary, Bristol Post obit, etc
- Anne Segrave or Anne Hamilton-Grace, daughter wrote a book about her Guardian review
- Phoebe Senyard, quite a bit in The Debs of Bletchley Park and Other Stories online via Google Books, Was Francis Harry Hinsley's boss for a time, and in charge of food
- Rosemary Brown Stanton, Williamson Herald obituary
- Gwen Watkins born Gwen Davies (married poet Vernon Watkins), Guardian coverage, might be enough
New articles started in October 2017
[edit]New articles best NOT to start
[edit]- Valerie Glassborow (redirects to Family of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, more famous for being Kate Middleton's grandmother. Article has been started twice and redirected both times, so probably best NOT to start it again!
Adding references
[edit]- <ref></ref> is the simplest option. Just copy and paste the webpage address (URL) between the ref tags, and save.
- Best to cite every sentence, not just every paragraph. That way you can rearrange your content more easily. Okay to cite the same source many times.
- "Bare URLs" are okay - someone else will fix them sooner or later. But there is any easy way to turn them into more proper references. When you're ready, go to reFill, type/copy in the article name and click on "Fix page". If it looks okay, then save. If you realise something is not right later, you can always tweak it - you can't break Wikipedia!
- For Google Books, you can use Reftag (type it into a search engine - it will be the first result, or go to Reftag. Copy the Google Books URL into the search box and click "Load". It will generate a full reference, and you can tweak the various fields to produce a full reference (click the "Make citation" button) in the box below that you can copy and paste into your Wikipedia article.
- For the "cite templates", click on the drop down arrow next to "Templates" in the menu bar above. For "cite book", all you need is the ISBN and the page number.
Pirate pad
[edit]See also
[edit]- Women in Bletchley Park
- List of people associated with Bletchley Park
- List of women in Bletchley Park