there were two colossus and the bomb
Bletchley Park's
The Colossus Computer was constructed to help the code breakers at Bletchley Park, England, to break the German's Enigma codes during World War II. It was the world's first electronic, digital, programmable computer.
Bletchley Park, the site of world War II British code breaking and Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic digital computer, is within the town boundaries of Milton Keynes.
Bletchley Park was created in 1993.
Not certain, but probably the British cryptanalysts at Bletchley Park in WW2. The programmable special purpose electronic cryptanalytic computer Colossus produced its output results on a modified electric typewriter when it found possible keys to the message it was trying to crack.
How many huts were there at Bletchley park
The first electronic programmable computer was made by British Post Office engineers in 1942/1943 at Bletchley Park in the UK. It was made to break the Enigma (and other codes) used by the German armed forces during world war two.
I'm not certain what you mean by "ethnicity" and it also depends what you mean by computer, but the first programmable computer was invented by Charles Babbage in England. The first digital electronic computer was developed at Bletchley Park (also in England) during world war 2. It was designed and built by Tommy Flowers.
The answer to this depends on what you mean by computer; but the earliest programmable computers were "Difference Engines" - this was in the mid-19th Century. Babbage simply called the machines difference engines. The first electronic computer was probably Colossus (built in 1943/44 to decode German codes). ENIAC was built in 1944; until the disclosure of the wartime work at Bletchley Park, this was considered the earliest electronic computer.
The credit for the first programmable digital computer goes to Colossus which was an Allied WWII code-breaking machine at Bletchley Park. For other uses of the term computer besides the modern "digital computer" one, an earlier answer might apply. For additional information including a discussion of analog and mechanical computers, non-programmable digital computers, and the general history of machine computation, see the Wikipedia article on "Computer".
Central London to Bletchley Park is about 48 miles by road.
The official military title of the code-breakers at Bletchley Park was not the wrens and their larks. The official name of the code-breaking machine at Bletchley Park was Station X. Bletchley Park was located 50 miles north of London.