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Pages in category "1960s cars" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 489 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
Gardner Douglas Sports Cars (1990–present) Gentry (car brand) (1973–present) Gibbs (2004–present) Ginetta (1957–present) GKD Sports Cars (2004–present) Gordon Murray Automotive (2017–present) GP (car brand) (1966–present) Great British Sports Cars (2006–present) Grinnall (1993–present) GTO Engineering (1996–present) H. Hawk ...
Between 1954 and 1959, the 6/90 was the only car to bear the famous illuminated Wolseley radiator badge. 6/90 production ended in 1959 with the introduction of the Pininfarina-designed 6/99. Until the early 1960s, the definitive British police car was a black Wolseley 6/90 with a brass Winkworth bell [4] on its front bumper.
A BMC share certificate A BMC ambulance A 1963 Austin Mini Super-Deluxe The Mini was BMC's all-time best seller. A 1965 Riley 4/72. BMC was the largest British car company of its day, with (in 1952) 39% of British output, producing a wide range of cars under brand names including Austin, Morris, MG, Austin-Healey, Riley, and Wolseley, as well as commercial vehicles and agricultural tractors.
The Hillman Minx was a mid-sized family car that British car maker Hillman produced from 1931 to 1970. There were many versions of the Minx over that period, as well as badge engineered variants sold by Humber, Singer, and Sunbeam.
The 1960s saw a slow but sure increase in the popularity of foreign cars on the British market. Volkswagen of West Germany had imported the iconic Beetle to Britain since 1953; this car was first launched in 1937 as a "people's car" for the German market under the Nazi regime.
Leyland Motors Limited (later known as the Leyland Motor Corporation) was an English vehicle manufacturer of lorries, buses and trolleybuses.The company diversified into car manufacturing with its acquisitions of Triumph and Rover in 1960 and 1967, respectively.
Gordon-Keeble was a British car marque, conceived in Slough, then constructed in Eastleigh, and finally in Southampton (all in England), between 1964 and 1967. [1] The marque's badge was unusual in featuring a tortoise — a pet tortoise walked into the frame of an inaugural photo-shoot, taken in the grounds of the makers.
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