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  2. Sytner Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sytner_Group

    Sytner Mini, one of two Sytner-operated dealerships on Usk Way in Newport, South Wales. November 2009. The group was formed by Frank Sytner and his brother Alan, [6] the owner of the famous Liverpool-based Cavern Club. The brothers founded their first retail franchise in Nottingham in 1968, selling BMWs. [1] [7]

  3. Neyland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neyland

    View of Neyland Marina looking out towards the Cleddau Original broad gauge rails used as safety barriers at Neyland. Neyland was a small fishing village in the parish of Llanstadwell, but in 1856 it became the site for the western terminus of Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Great Western Railway [3] [4] with a transatlantic terminal for the largest ships of the time.

  4. Johnston railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnston_railway_station

    The station was opened with the final section of the South Wales Railway main line, from Haverfordwest to Neyland, on 15 April 1856. [1] [2] Originally named Johnston, it has been renamed several times: to Milford Road in November 1859; to Johnston on 7 September 1863; to Johnston (Pembroke) on 18 June 1928; to Johnston (Dyfed) on 3 May 1976, [2] before finally resuming its original name.

  5. South Wales Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Wales_Railway

    The South Wales Railway (Welsh: Rheilffordd De Cymru) was a main line railway which opened in stages from 1850, connecting the Great Western Railway from Gloucester to South Wales. It was constructed on the broad gauge. An original aspiration was to reach Fishguard to engender an Irish ferry transit and transatlantic trade, but the latter did ...

  6. Neyland railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neyland_railway_station

    Neyland Railway Station, in 1856. Illustrated London News, Ebenezer Landells. The Great Western Railway (GWR) was established under the vision of Isambard Kingdom Brunel, to link London to North America on the quickest possible route, with steamships landing passengers and goods in West Wales as opposed to steaming to an English port.

  7. Llanstadwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llanstadwell

    The ecclesiastical parish of Llanstadwell still includes Neyland, whose St Clement's Church is a daughter church to Llanstadwell. [ 15 ] In Newton, on the site of the above-mentioned 16th-century house and dovecote, a farmstead was built probably dating to the early 19th century; hardly any of it has survived, as it was demolished in the 1960s ...

  8. List of Audi vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Audi_vehicles

    The following list of Audi vehicles, including past and present production models, as well as concept vehicles and limited editions. The current era of Audi production dates to 1968, when present-day owner Volkswagen Group , which had purchased Auto Union from Mercedes-Benz in 1965, debuted the first modern Audi-branded vehicles.

  9. A477 road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A477_road

    The 22-mile section of the road from its start at St Clears as far as Nash—which is a convenient distribution point for places on the south side of Milford Haven—was promoted to a trunk road following an announcement by the (then) Secretary of State for Wales, Cledwyn Hughes, on 14 November 1966. [4]