He was born to Charles and Clara Denning in 1904, in Whitchurch in the accommodation above his parents shop. He had 4 older brothers and 1 sister. His four older brothers joined the forces in defence of World War 1, though only two returnedAlfred Thompson 'Tom' Denning and Reginald Denning. Educated at Andover Grammar School and like his brothers he joined up. Norman joined the forces, choosing the Royal Navy shortly after the end of World War I; despite his bad eyesight he was accepted into the Paymaster Branch. He served as secretary to various senior figures and also worked in supplying naval vessels, but quickly became an expert on naval intelligence. For several years in the early 1930s he served in Singapore and while there was surprised by the number of Japanese fishing and research boats around Singapore, and from his research concluded that the Japanese were in a position where they were able to attack Singapore by land, rather than sea as the British defence plans assumed. He wrote a report and submitted it to the Director of Naval Intelligence, but it was dismissed as him 'over-exercising his imagination'. In 1937 was appointed to the Naval Intelligence Division and attempted to reform the division using lessons learnt from World War I. He was assisted in this by his discovery of a room of old Naval Intelligence papers from World War I and its aftermath, including studies by staff members as to how the unit could be used more effectively and what lessons should be learnt from the use of intelligence-gathering in the war.
Wartime career
In 1939, with the permission of James Troup, Director of Naval Intelligence from 1935 to 1939, and John Henry Godfrey, Director of Naval Intelligence from 1939 to 1943, the then Lieutenant Commander Denning formulated and established the Operational Intelligence Centre for the Navy based at the Admiralty Citadel in London. The OIC became a key and vital element for the British intelligence services, coordinating efforts between decryption units such as the Government Code and Cypher School and the staff and command officers planning operations. Furthermore, Denning was one of the first intelligence officers to recognise the potential of photographic reconnaissance as a worthwhile intelligence source. Consequently, Denning helped persuade the heads of the Royal Air Force to allow the Australian officer Sidney Cotton's pioneering unit, the RAF Photographic Development Unit and then No. 1 Photographic Reconnaissance Unit RAF to be used for intelligence-gathering. One example from his ww2 intelligence gathering and analysis efforts was included within the BBC PQ17 convey documentary by Jeremy Clarkson c.2014.
He married Iris Curtis in 1933, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. His eldest son John followed him into the navy and joined the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, dying in 1975 after a fall. He was buried next to his eldest sons ashes within the Micheldever churchyard. Some Family records have been donated to the Winchester museum and are available for public access.