Bayesian methods at Bletchley Park
From Nick Patterson's interview on Talking Machines:
GCHQ in the '70s, we thought of ourselves as completely Bayesian statisticians. All our data analysis was completely Bayesian, and that was a direct inheritance from Alan Turing. I'm not sure this has ever really been published, but Turing, almost as a sideline during his cryptoanalytic work, reinvented Bayesian statistics for himself. The work against Enigma and other German ciphers was fully Bayesian. "
Bayesian statistics was an extreme minority discipline in the '70s. In academia, I only really know of two people who were working majorly in the field, Jimmy Savage " in the States and Dennis Lindley in Britain. And they were regarded as fringe figures in the statistics community. It's extremely different now. The reason is that Bayesian statistics works. So eventually truth will out. There are many, many problems where Bayesian methods are obviously the right thing to do. But in the '70s we understood that already in Britain in the classified environment.