George Whaley (born 1860 or 1861) was a unionist politician in Northern Ireland.
Whaley worked as a baker. He was active in the Ulster Unionist Party, and was elected to the Senate of Northern Ireland in 1940, at the age of eighty, serving for five years.
George Whaley is an Australian actor and director, known for his work across theatre and film. He was born in Castlemaine, Victoria, Australia.
Coordinates: 53°14′20″N 1°13′48″W / 53.239°N 1.230°W / 53.239; -1.230
Whaley is a small village in Derbyshire, England, located one mile from Whaley Thorns, 1½ miles from Elmton, 1½ miles from Langwith and 2½ miles from Bolsover.
The village has a pub, garage and a former watermill, now a home, of which the large mill pond still survives.
Set in arable farmland, the village was a farming settlement, and remains so to this day with several farming families living in the village. The Diocese of Derby archives record that there was an ancient chapel in the village, but no traces of that remain. A school, known as St Mary's Mission, and school house were built in the 1860s but both these are now residential.
There are three pre-historic rock shelters behind the former school, on Magg Lane and opposite the pub, the Black Horse. These are linked to the Creswell Crags.
Scarcliffe Park, an area of woodland to the south end of the village, has Bronze Age and Roman remains. It is surrounded by a Pale ditch.
Whaley is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Whaley is a village in Derbyshire, England.
Whaley may also refer to: