- to the government. Historically,
terms such as "jailer" (also
spelled "
gaoler"), "guard" and "warder" have all been used. The term "prison officer" is...
-
William Douglas, 2nd Earl of
Angus (24
February 1398 –
October 1437) was a
Scottish nobleman and soldier. The son of
George Douglas, 1st Earl of Angus...
- Zealand. His journal,
recording his
career as Dunedin's
first full-time
gaoler,
forms an
historical do****ent on
social conditions in New
Zealand in the...
-
Christophe Viola Prettejohn as Mary
Fitzroy Jordan Kouamé as
Martin the
Gaoler Agnes O'Casey as
Margaret Douglas Cecilia Appiah as Nan
Seymour Ellie de...
- George, Somerset, was an
English diplomat,
Governor of Jersey, and the
gaoler for a
period of Mary,
Queen of Scots. He was the son of Sir Hugh Paulet...
-
Yeoman Warder is
former Royal Navy
serviceman Rob
Fuller and the
Yeoman Gaoler is
Clive Towell a
former British Army
Sergeant Major. The
Yeomen Warders...
- and lost an eye in the
Battle of Waterloo.[disputed – discuss] He was the
gaoler at
Fremantle from 1831
until he was
given the job of
constructing the "Rottnest...
-
Geoff McGivern as Lord
Alistair Rookwood Joe
Wilkinson as
Geoffrey the
Gaoler Kiri
Flaherty as
Little Karen Hugh
Bonneville as
Jonathan Wilde Asim Chaudhry...
-
colloquial term for a
Goaltender Occupation: an
archaic spelling for the
Gaoler of a
Prison This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the...
- Vice-Admiral
Robert Plampin (1762 – 14
February 1834) was a
British Royal Navy
officer during the late 18th and
early 19th centuries,
serving in the American...