Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

After Decades Of Secrecy, Two Sisters' Role As Codebreakers During WWII Finally Recognized

After Decades Of Secrecy, Two Sisters' Role As Codebreakers During WWII Finally Recognized
Jean Argles and Patricia Davie, both born Owtram, the last living sisters to have both signed the Official Secrets Act in Second World War, unveil their portrait by Dan Llywelyn Hall, in west London, ahead of VJ Day (Victoria Jones/PA)

Two sisters who were codebreakers during the Second World War have spoken of their “surprise" after a portrait of them was unveiled ahead of VJ Day.

Patricia and Jean Owtram, both in their 90s, played important roles in the war but had never spoken of them because they had signed the Official Secrets Act.


But the pair's recollections are featured in a book called Codebreaking Sisters: Our Secret War.

On Thursday, a painting of the two of them holding a telegram from their father, a prisoner of war, was unveiled at a socially-distanced gathering at Patricia's home in Chiswick, west London.

It comes ahead of the 75th anniversary of VJ Day, marking the surrender of Japan and the end of the war in 1945.

“It's a great surprise to have a portrait painted at all because this wasn't something we were expecting in our 90s," Patricia and Jean said, speaking to the PA news agency.

Both sisters became fluent in German after their family took in Austrian Jewish staff in the late 1930s.

After the war broke out in 1939, Patricia, then 18 years old, was posted to top-secret listening stations along the British coastline where she intercepted German shipping radio.

Jean, landed a secretive role as Code & Cipher Officer in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry at 18 years old, she was posted to Cairo before moving on to Italy to support allied agents and aid partisan efforts against the Nazis.

“What Jean and I were doing during the war was very different," Patricia said.

“It was years after the war before I actually got around to saying 'by the way Jean, what were you doing in Egypt and Italy?'"

“Because, as we had both signed the Official Secrets Act, we didn't tell each other or any of our family."

Their father Colonel Cary Owtram had been held in a prisoners camp in Thailand, near to the River Kwai.

The internet is astounded with their story.



And, some even shared their own experiences.


Painter Dan Llywelyn Hall said the portrait took several months, and he now hopes it will be placed in a museum.

“It's a rare moment when you sit with sisters to have a shared memory of pivotal moments in history," he said.

“The portrait explores the idea of a how a shared secret is honored."

“Both sisters signed the secrets act and I'm interested in the moral conscience that upkeeps the lifelong private discourse."

More from Trending

Donald Trump
Scott Olson/Getty Images

Fox News Just Listed Off Trump's 'Accomplishments' So Far—And They're Completely Bananas

As shown during coverage of a cabinet meeting when members spent time telling the President how great he is, MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's biggest priority is Donald Trump's image and ego.

Also caught on video was Trump telling a Fox News correspondent to make sure the network praised his cabinet meeting.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Donald Trump and Terry Moran
ABC News

Trump Bizarrely Clashes With Reporter Over Photoshopped 'Tattoo' On Abrego Garcia's Knuckles

President Donald Trump sparked criticism after claiming during an interview with ABC News’ Terry Moran that an edited photo depicting tattoos of wrongly-deported Maryland father Kilmar Abrego Garcia showed that he has an alleged connection to the MS-13 gang.

Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national who arrived in the U.S. in 2012, was labeled a threat in 2019 due to an alleged connection to MS-13. He spent months in detention before an immigration judge found he had a credible fear of persecution—not from MS-13, but from a rival group, Barrio 18, which he said had been extorting his family.

Keep ReadingShow less
Karoline Leavitt; Jeff Bezos
Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Leavitt Lashes Out At Amazon Over 'Hostile' Plan To Display Added Tariff Costs For Products On Website

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt lashed out at Amazon over news that the commerce giant planned to display increased "import charges" on items on their Amazon Haul website, essentially showing to customers the extra money they'd have to shell out as a result of President Donald Trump's tariffs.

Trump has escalated a growing trade war by imposing tariffs of up to 145% on Chinese imports, prompting China to retaliate with its own 125% tariffs on American goods. Additionally, the U.S. has slapped a 10% tax on imports from most other countries, while temporarily suspending higher rates for several nations for 90 days.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Canadian voter
CNN

Canadian Voter's Epic Take On Trump In Viral Interview Clip Has The Internet Cheering

A Canadian woman has gone viral following her NSFW interview with CNN in which she explained that her decision of whom to support for prime minister In Monday's election was based primarily on who could "take care of" President Donald Trump, who had threatened Canadian sovereignty amid an ongoing trade war.

In the end, Canadian voters returned the Liberal Party to power for a fourth consecutive term, although Prime Minister Mark Carney will lead a minority government, according to projections from CNN’s broadcast partner CBC.

Keep ReadingShow less
man and woman with cardboard boxes on their heads with faces drawn on them
julio andres rosario ortiz on Unsplash

People Describe The Most Unhinged Things They've Seen Someone Do In Public

One person's "most unhinged thing they've ever seen" is another person's everyday occurrence. It's all about perspective.

If you live 24/7 in an insane environment, unhinged starts to seem completely normal.

Keep ReadingShow less