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Encyclopedia > Edward Hugh Hebern

Edward Hugh Hebern (April 23, 1869February 10, 1952) was an early inventor of rotor machines, devices for encryption. He got a patent in 1919, shortly before three others patented (in other countries) much the same thing. They were Arthur Scherbius in Germany, Hugo Koch in the Netherlands, and A Damm in Sweden. Hebern started a company to market the Hebern rotor machine; one of his employees was Agnes Meyer, who left the Navy in Washington DC to work for Hebern in California. Scherbius designed the Enigma, Koch sold his patent to Scherbius a few years later, and Damm's company — taken over by Boris Hagelin after his death — moved to Switzerland and is still in existence, as Crypto AG.


Hebern's implementation of his idea was less secure than he believed, for William F. Friedman found at least one method of attack when it was offered to the US Government. Hebern's company did not prosper, his promotional efforts for it were questioned, and he was tried and convicted for fraud. Agnes Meyer returned to the Washington to work for the Navy.


With Frank Rowlett, Friedman went on to design a much more secure, and much more complex, rotor machine for the US Army. It eventually became the SIGABA.


Hebern's patents included US patents #1,096,168, #1,510,441, #1,683,072, #1,861,857 and #2,373,890.


Hebern was born in Streator, Illinois on April 23, 1869. He was brought up in the Soldiers' Orphan Home in Bloomington. At the age of 14, he lived and worked on a farm near Odin. Later, he became a carpenter. He died of a heart attack on 10 February, 1952.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Hebern Rotor Machine (961 words)
The Hebern Rotor Machine was an electro-mechanical encryption machine built by combining the mechanical parts of a standard typewriter with the electrical parts of an electric typewriter, connecting the two through a scrambler.
Prior to the introduction of the Hebern machine, encryption almost always consisted of matching the plaintext to be encyphered against a set of substitution alphabets, randomized series of letters.
Edward Hugh Hebern (April 23, 1869- 1952) was a building contractor who was jailed in 1908 for stealing a horse.
Edward Hebern - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (281 words)
Hebern started a company to market the Hebern rotor machine; one of his employees was Agnes Meyer, who left the Navy in Washington DC to work for Hebern in California.
Hebern's implementation of his idea was less secure than he believed, for William F. Friedman found at least one method of attack when it was offered to the US Government.
Hebern was born in Streator, Illinois on April 23, 1869.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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