https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/25/world/europe/alan-turing-50-pound-note.html?mc=aud_dev&ad_name=%7B%7Bad.name%7D%7D&adset_name=%7B%7Badset.name%7D%7D&campaign_id= [login to see] 2790063&ad-keywords=auddevgate&subid1=TAFI&ad_id= [login to see] 7440063&adset_id= [login to see] 7060063&fbclid=IwAR0wmM5dkNlTfqyzbW0tt1HCGTx20YxjOOJKJFb3ioJwcEKr0jRwACwEfPM&dclid=CKHX0r6siPACFYJ6AQodEQMG3g
The mathematician Alan Turing spent World War II cracking German codes, and is credited by many historians with helping to hasten the end of the conflict. But a conviction under Victorian indecency laws for his homosexuality left his postwar life in ruins.
On Thursday, the Bank of England unveiled a bill featuring Mr. Turing, one of a series of efforts by Britain in recent years to posthumously right some of the wrongs inflicted on Mr. Turing during his lifetime.
Mr. Turing’s scientific contributions embodied “the spirit of the nation” and “showed us the way to the future,” said Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, as he introduced the bill. “By placing him on this new £50 bank note, we celebrate him for his achievements and the values he symbolizes, for which we can all be very proud.”