Additionally to the Army’s code breaking operation, there was an African American group unit (implemented by Eleanor Roosevelt) that helped with the enciphered communications of certain companies, and to get better insight of who was collaborating with dictators such as Mitsubishi and
Hitler. Women such as
Agnes Meyer Driscoll, aided in unraveling the Japanese navy fleet codes during the 1920s and 1930s. Another significant cryptanalyst named
Elizabeth Smith Friedman was the first to discover the US government’s codebreaking bureau in 1916, where she worked for Riverbank at an unconventional Illinois estate. During prohibition, she deciphered the codes of which businesses were smuggling alcoholic beverages, also known as rum running. In September 1940, due to Genevieve Grotjan’s key expertise, the Allies were able to get information on the Japanese diplomats’ communications throughout World War II. Her decrypting assisted in monitoring the enciphering machines used by
Hiroshi Oshima, Japanese Ambassador to
Nazi Germany, who was close to Adolf Hitler and other Nazi political and military leaders. He got much detailed information from the Nazis, and was given access to their military installations - which he transmitted to Japan, not realizing that the Americans were reading his transmissions which were a major source of information. The navy and army were all competing for the women’s skills after recognizing all of their efforts made in the World War. Specifically,
Ada Comstock urged for the Navy to train the undergraduates in cryptanalysis, realizing how the country lacked a demand of educated women after the surprise attack at
Pearl Harbor. More women were being enlisted in the workforce, especially to the WAAC recruiting station, where they needed to pass background checks to be in the code breaking service. At
Arlington Hall (which became the headquarters of the United States Army
Signal Intelligence Service),
Ann Caracristi went against master Japanese cryptanalysts and solved many message addresses which helped the military intelligence locate many of the Japanese troops. Japanese ships were sunk as a result of the messages given to Dot Braden and other women who deciphered naval codes along the major oceans. The Japanese fleet code called JN-25 was used by these women who created the cryptoanalytic assembly line, and aided in shooting down
Isoroku Yamamoto's plane. All of the machines that targeted and attacked the German Enigma ciphers were managed by women, additionally they tracked the locations of Allied convoys and U-boats. In order to destroy the German naval Enigma ciphers, women assisted in building one hundred "
bombe" machines in a classified building located in the National Cash Register Company. JAH, which was an all purpose code that contained important material such as speeches, orders and memos was handled by
Virginia Dare Aderholdt. She was able to know when Japan evacuated from southern China and track all of Naotake Sato's endeavors. ==Notable WW II era women cryptologists==