A CAMPAIGN has been launched to win an official apology for tragic computer pioneer Alan Turing.

The brilliant mathematician, who lived in Wilmslow and spent his key years at Manchester University, was one of the founders of computing.

But a conviction for homosexuality effectively ended his career.

Troubled Turing went on to commit suicide in 1954, aged just 41. Now a group of admirers of the scientist — named as one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century by Time Magazine — are lobbying the government to make a posthumous apology.

The Cambridge graduate was one of Britain's greatest wartime codebreakers - part of the team at Bletchley Park, near Milton Keynes, which unravelled the secret of the Enigma code machines used by the Germans.

Mr Turing was awarded an OBE in 1945 for his wartime services and movedto Manchester to help work on the pioneering Mark 1 computer.

He was prosecuted for gross indecency for having sex with a man in 1952 but escaped jail after being offered an alternative of taking an experimental hormone treatment to reduce sex drive.

However, the case effectively ended his career and Turing fell into despair. His body was found by a cleaner at his Wilmslow home in 1954 - next to him was a half-eaten apple laced with cyanide. It was not until 1967 that laws against gay men were lifted. More than 500 people have now signed the petition on the 10 Downing Street website for an apology.

John Graham-Cumming, a leading British computer expert who launched the campaign, said: "I think that Alan Turing has’t been recognised in Britain for his enormous contribution because he died in his 40s and almost certainly because he was gay.

"It is atrocious that we don't recognise this man and the only way to do so is to apologise to him. This man was a national treasure and we hounded him to his death.

"He was part of the war effort but we don't give him recognition in the same way as other heroes. To me, he was a hero in the Second World War."

Since his death, plaques, buildings and statues have been raised in Turing's name.

The computing world’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize has been called the Turing Award since 1966.