The original answer supplied was "Hyde Park was the home of FDR and where he went when not in the White House". My addition- The person asking the question means Hyde Park in London. Not the home of FDR.
Yes
Bletchley Park was famous for decrypting "Ultra" .
hi
Bletchley Park was an Intelligence and code breaking centre during WW2.Bletchley Park was an Intelligence and code breaking centre during WW2.
Mainly horses were used in World War 2. But donkeys were used in World War 1.
hyde park was used as car park due to rail strike, to allow more people to take there cars into London
Bletchley Park
Yes
Not a walk in the park
During World War II the United States used a couple different sub-machine guns such as the M3/A1 "Grease Gun", the infamous Thompson sub-machine gun the M50/55 Reising the M42 and the M2 "Hyde."
Bletchley Park was famous for decrypting "Ultra" .
The Hyde Park Agreement was also entered into by Roosevelt and Churchill when Churchill saw Roosevelt at Hyde Park on 17 & 18 September 1944. This provided for Full collaboration between the United States and the British Government in developing Tube Alloys (the British code name for the bomb project) for military and commercial purposes should continue after the defeat of Japan unless and until terminated by joint agreement" However "This agreement was improperly filed at Hyde Park under "Tube Alloys" and so did not become known to Stimson or General Marshall until after the war, when the United Kingdom furnished a copy. Even then, Groves questioned the document's authenticity until the United States' copy was located.
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hi
Bletchley Park was the British code breaking establishment.
Bletchley Park was an Intelligence and code breaking centre during WW2.Bletchley Park was an Intelligence and code breaking centre during WW2.
Bletchley Park