Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Both Numark and Rowlands Pharmacy are owned by Phoenix. [2] Each pharmacy business within Numark is an independently owned outlet, but membership of Numark allows individual retailers to take advantage of "group purchasing deals" to reduce their costs. This model is known as a symbol group, or virtual chain.
The Rowlands estate comprised approximately 70 pharmacies in November 2011. In 2000, the number of employees across the group exceeded 10,000 for the first time and the company acquired the Finnish Tamro Group in April with a 33.7% stake. In the year 2002, Phoenix Pharmahandel AG & Co KG merged with Ferd.
Dolgellau and Barmouth Hospital (Welsh: Ysbyty Dolgellau ac Abermaw) is a health facility in Dolgellau, Gwynedd, Wales. It is managed by the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board . It is a Grade II listed building .
This page was last edited on 13 October 2024, at 19:54 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Barmouth railway station serves the seaside town of Barmouth in Gwynedd, Wales. The station is on the Cambrian Coast Railway with passenger services to Harlech, Porthmadog, Pwllheli, Tywyn, Aberdovey, Machynlleth and Shrewsbury. Between Morfa Mawddach and Barmouth the railway crosses the Afon Mawddach on the Barmouth Bridge.
Barmouth has one major football team: Barmouth & Dyffryn United, which competes in the Welsh Alliance League. Barmouth is the venue for the annual Barmouth Beach Race, a motocross event. Usually taking place on the last weekend in October, the event sees riders take part in beach racing , using a temporary motocross course constructed on the beach.
Catholic worship started in Barmouth in 1890. A Fr. Donovan held services in the rooms of local houses until a small church was erected on Park Road. This was opened on 11 September 1891, on the very day that the steeple of the nearby St John's Church fell down. [2]
Mrs Sarah Perrins and her family owned a holiday home in Barmouth called Plas Mynach and would have been aware of the need to build a larger church. St John's took seven years to build between the laying of the foundation stone in 1889 by Princess Beatrice of Battenberg to its consecration in November 1895 by Bishop Cambell of Bangor.