Background
Rowlett was born in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia and attended Emory & Henry College in Emory, Virginia.
Rowlett was born in Rose Hill, Lee County, Virginia and attended Emory & Henry College in Emory, Virginia.
Emory and Henry College.
In 1929 he received a bachelor"s degree in mathematics and chemistry. He was hired by William Friedman as a "junior cryptanalyst" for the Signals Intelligence Service (SIS) on April Fools" Day, 1930. Shortly after, he was followed into SIS by Abraham Sinkov and Solomon Kullback.
During the 1930s, after a lengthy period of training, Rowlett and his colleagues compiled codes and ciphers for use by the United States. Army and began solving a number of foreign, notably Japanese, systems
In the mid-1930s, they solved the first Japanese machine for encipherment of diplomatic communications, known to the Americans as RED. In 1939-1940, Rowlett led the SIS effort that solved a more sophisticated Japanese diplomatic machine cipher, codenamed PURPLE by the United States. Once, when asked what his greatest contribution to that effort had been, Rowlett said, "I was the one who believed it could be done."
Rowlett also played a crucial role in protecting American communications during World World War II, making fundamental and innovative contributions to the design of the SIGABA cipher machine. Its security was an important factor in saving American lives in combat.
(In 1964, Congress awarded Rowlett United States$100,000 as partial compensation for his classified cryptologic inventions). In addition to having highly developed cryptanalytic skills, Rowlett was a good manager, and he rose quickly within the organization.
In 1943-1945 he was chief of the General Cryptanalytic Branch, and in 1945-1947 chief of the Intelligence Division.
From 1949 to 1952, he was technical director in the Office of Operations of the Armed Forces Security Agency, predecessor to the National Security Agency (National Security Agency). Rowlett differed with General Ralph J. Canine, the first director of National Security Agency, over personnel movements, including his own. Acting on his differences, he transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency (Central Intelligence Agency) in 1952 and worked there until 1958.
At that time he returned to National Security Agency as a Special Assistant to the Director.
In 1965 Rowlett became commandant of the National Cryptologic School. He retired from federal service in 1966.
In 1965 he was awarded the National Security Medal by President Lyndon B. Johnson for his work on breaking the Japanese Purple cipher. Rowlett has been inducted into the Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.
Frank Rowlett died June 29, 1998, at age 90.