Template:Infobox prison/testcases

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Marshalsea
Three two-storey buildings in a staggered row, each with mullioned windows and the central one with a four-columned entrance. Three standing men converse in the courtyard in front, and two men sit at a bench, one drinking and gesturing.
The prison occupied two locations, the first c. 1329–1811, and the second 1811–1842. The image above is of the first Marshalsea in the 18th century.
Map
LocationSouthwark, London
Coordinates51°30′06″N 0°05′32″W / 51.501658°N 0.092103°W / 51.501658; -0.092103
Statusdefunct
Capacityup to an average of 200
Populationmainly debtors, with some pirates, smugglers, and those accused of sedition
Openedcirca 1329
Closed1842
Managed byThe Knight Marshal of the British royal household
ZIP Code93046
Notable prisoners
Edmund Bonner, John Dickens, Sir John Eliot, Ben Jonson, John Selden, George Wither
Marshalsea
Three two-storey buildings in a staggered row, each with mullioned windows and the central one with a four-columned entrance. Three standing men converse in the courtyard in front, and two men sit at a bench, one drinking and gesturing.
The prison occupied two locations, the first c. 1329–1811, and the second 1811–1842. The image above is of the first Marshalsea in the 18th century.
Map
LocationSouthwark, London
Coordinates51°30′06″N 0°05′32″W / 51.501658°N 0.092103°W / 51.501658; -0.092103
Statusdefunct
Capacityup to an average of 200
Populationmainly debtors, with some pirates, smugglers, and those accused of sedition
Openedcirca 1329
Closed1842
Managed byThe Knight Marshal of the British royal household
ZIP Code93046
Notable prisoners
Edmund Bonner, John Dickens, Sir John Eliot, Ben Jonson, John Selden, George Wither