http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/science/26code.html Excerpts: The 1882 monograph that Dr. Bellovin stumbled across in the Library of Congress was "Telegraphic Code to Insure Privacy and Secrecy in the Transmission of Telegrams," by Frank Miller, a successful banker in Sacramento who later became a trustee of Stanford University. In Millers preface, the key points jumped off the page: "A banker in the West should prepare a list of irregular numbers to be called shift numbers," he wrote. "The difference between such numbers must not be regular. When a shift-number has been applied, or used, it must be erased from the list and not be used again." That sent the astonished Dr. Bellovin to the Internet to try to find out whether Mr. Millers innovation was known to the later inventors. The results of his largely online detective work can be found in the July issue of the journal Cryptologia. ... According to several independent specialists in cryptography, Mr. Miller was undoubtedly the first to propose the concept of the one-time pad. "Miller probably invented the one-time pad, but without knowing why it was perfectly secure or even that it was," said David Kahn, the author of the definitive 1967 book "The Codebreakers." "Moreover, unlike Mauborgnes conscious invention, or the Germans conscious adoption of the one-time pad to superencipher their Foreign Office codes, it had no echo, no use in cryptology. It sank without a trace until Steve found it by accident."