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View Full Version : Brit Finds Secret Message on Dead World War II Carrier Pigeon


Fractured Silhouette
November 2nd, 2012, 06:49 PM
An English couple found the remains of a pigeon while renovating their chimney.

Carrier pigeons are birds trained to fly home to a location, such as a house or airfield, and they've been used for centuries as a means of communicating over long distances. They were even used as late as World War II; the British Royal Air Force sent birds along with every bomber mission in order to send back word in case the plane crashed in enemy territory.

Fast forward to today, when David Martin began renovating the chimney at his house in the village of Bletchingley in Surrey. Among the rubbish pulled out of the chimney were the preserved pigeon bones of a bird and around a leg bone was a red capsule containing a small rolled up piece of paper. On the paper is a message that might just contain new insights about events in World War II. The only problem is the message is written in a code, the key to which we seem to have lost. The British government doesn't know what the code is, but they have the top codebreakers in the country working on it now.

David Martin described what it was like to find the pigeon's remains as he was cleaning his chimney. "I started pulling it down, bags and bag of rubbish," Martin said. "And then, the pigeon bones started appearing one by one. About three handfuls of rubbish later, down came the leg with the red capsule on it, with a message inside. Unbelievable."

"It was like Christmas," his wife said.

The number on the capsule doesn't match with any records, but what's crazy is the red capsule was only used by the Special Operations Executives - special agents who frequently worked behind enemy lines. Perhaps that's why the message was encoded. Yet it's still odd, for even the birds used by the famous codebreakers at Bletchley Park during the war were all written using plain language.

I'm interested to find out more about this message because it may contain a little piece of history we would never have discovered if it weren't for David Martin finally getting around to cleaning his chimney. I mean, what has he been doing for the last 70 years? Letting it get filled with leaves and pigeon bones? Sheesh.

http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/120479-Brit-Finds-Secret-Message-on-Dead-World-War-II-Carrier-Pigeon

Noirtier
November 2nd, 2012, 07:21 PM
First of all, ew. Just imagine what it's like to be cleaning out your chimney, all nonchalant like, and then BOOM, pigeon remains start plummeting down. Not something that I would find all that pleasant, even if they were just bones. But anyway, that's really amazing. I'm really interested to find out what it says when they get it decoded! It's a little piece of history, found in a chimney.

Mirage
November 2nd, 2012, 08:06 PM
First of all, ew. Just imagine what it's like to be cleaning out your chimney, all nonchalant like, and then BOOM, pigeon remains start plummeting down. Not something that I would find all that pleasant, even if they were just bones. But anyway, that's really amazing. I'm really interested to find out what it says when they get it decoded! It's a little piece of history, found in a chimney.

Do you think once they do figure it out they'll share it with the public? Likely not. If it's encoded, it probably wasn't meant to be read anyways. I imagine it will stay within the government, and maybe, MAYBE the family who found it.

Mortal Coil
November 2nd, 2012, 08:31 PM
First of all, ew. Just imagine what it's like to be cleaning out your chimney, all nonchalant like, and then BOOM, pigeon remains start plummeting down.

I laughed way harder than I should at that. You have a point.

I'm more curious about why the pigeon didn't get to its destination than anything else.

Stronger
November 2nd, 2012, 08:38 PM
I laughed way harder than I should at that. You have a point.

I'm more curious about why the pigeon didn't get to its destination than anything else.

I'm curious how it ended up inside the chimney, but I am also curious as to what it says.

Haufen
November 3rd, 2012, 04:09 PM
Do you think once they do figure it out they'll share it with the public? Likely not. If it's encoded, it probably wasn't meant to be read anyways. I imagine it will stay within the government, and maybe, MAYBE the family who found it.

It's a WWII message. There have been thousands of these messages-by-bird in WWII. The 'secrets' it holds are probably already known and probably weren't even relevant anymore when the war ended. It likely holds contemporary strategical or intelligence information.

IAMWILL
November 3rd, 2012, 07:08 PM
This is pretty cool, I'm really interested to find out what it says. Watch them spend countless hours trying to decipher it and the note say something completely pointless.