His later career concentrated on graph theory. Among other achievements, he disproved Tait's conjecture using the construction known as Tutte's fragment. A majority of his later work was done at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Canada, which he joined in 1962.
In October 2001 he was inducted as an Officer of the Order of Canada.
References
Brooks, R. L.; Smith, C. A. B.; Stone, A. H.; and Tutte, W. T. "The Dissection of Rectangles into Squares." Duke Math. J. 7, 312-340, 1940
External links
Tutte's paper on one of the Fish ciphers (http://frode.home.cern.ch/frode/crypto/tutte.html)
Tutte worked at Bletchley Park as a codebreaker, and in a feat described as "one of the greatest intellectual feats of World War II" he was able to deduce the structure of the German Lorenz SZ 40/42 encryption machine (codenamed Tunny), used for high-level German Army communications, using only a number of intercepted encrypted messages.
BillTutte was born May 14, 1917 at Fitzroy House in Newmarket, England.
Tutte's great contribution was to uncover, from samples of the messages alone, the structure of the machines which generated these codes.
Tutte was an important ingredient in the recipe that produced the Faculty of Mathematics in 1967, becoming one of the first members of the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization.