In those early days, Millard Sr. also worked as a railway redcap downtown.
From the democratandchronicle.com
Another dumb journalist who will probably confuse a Derbyshire redcap with a Scots dumpy.
From the guardian.co.uk
A Pacific University graduate who once worked as a redcap despite a journalism degree, he was taken on as a copy boy in 1952.
From the time.com
More examples
A member of the military police in Britain
A porter who helps passengers with their baggage at a railroad station
A Red Cap or Redcap, also known as a powrie or dunter, is a type of malevolent murderous dwarf, goblin, elf or fairy found in Border Folklore. They are said to inhabit ruined castles found along the border between England and Scotland. ...
Redcap is a 2006 novel by the author Brian Callison. Set over a span of 10 years from 1957 to 1967 it follows the rather unfortunate career of the protagonist, one Staff Sergeant Walker of the Royal Military Police commencing in the Cypriot conflict between EOKA and British Personnel and then ...
REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) is a browser-based, metadata-driven EDC software solution and workflow methodology for designing clinical and translational research databases. ...
Redcap is a British television series produced by ABC Weekend Television and broadcast on the ITV network. It starred John Thaw as Sergeant John Mann, a member of the Special Investigation Branch of the Royal Military Police and ran for two series and 26 episodes between 1964 and 1966. ...
A member of the Royal Military Police a unit in the British army; A porter in a US railway station; Archaic name for the goldfinch (Carduelis carduelis); A type of evil goblin or imp
Station porter. Term coined about 1900 by George H. Daniels, New York Central publicist
In Irish Celtic mythology, a fairy known by his red hat and bloodthirsty ways.