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Afon Wen railway station

Disused railway stations in GwyneddFormer Cambrian Railway stationsLlanystumdwyPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1964
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1867
Afon Wen railway station geograph 2783617 by Ben Brooksbank
Afon Wen railway station geograph 2783617 by Ben Brooksbank

Afon Wen was a railway station in Afon Wen, Gwynedd, Wales, four miles (6 km) west of Criccieth. The station formed a junction between the Aberystwith and Welsh Coast Railway and the Carnarvonshire Railway and opened to traffic in September 1867.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Afon Wen railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Afon Wen railway station
A497,

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Wikipedia: Afon Wen railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.90909 ° E -4.31348 °
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Address

Afon Wen (Afon Wen Junction;Afon Wen Junction station;Afonwen;Afonwen Junction)

A497
LL53 6TX , Llanystumdwy
Wales, United Kingdom
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linkWikiData (Q4689369)
linkOpenStreetMap (4052198530)

Afon Wen railway station geograph 2783617 by Ben Brooksbank
Afon Wen railway station geograph 2783617 by Ben Brooksbank
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Nearby Places

Llangybi, Gwynedd
Llangybi, Gwynedd

Llangybi (English: Cybi's Church) is a village and former civil parish in the Eifionydd area of the Welsh county of Gwynedd, near Llanarmon. The parish was abolished in 1934 and divided between Llanystumdwy and Llannor. St Cybi's church is a grade II* building.As well as various menhirs, tumuli and stone circles in the countryside around, the village is particularly noted for a holy well, Ffynnon Gybi (English: St Cybi's Well). According to local tradition the girls who wished to know their lover's intentions would spread their pocket-handkerchiefs on the water of the well, and, if the water pushed the handkerchiefs to the south they knew that everything was right and that their lovers were honest and honourable in their intentions; but, if the water shifted the handkerchiefs northwards, they concluded the contrary. A reference to this is made in severe terms by a modern Welsh poet. "This parish, which derives its name from the dedication of its church to Saint Cybi, an eminent British saint, who flourished towards the close of the sixth century, is pleasantly situated in the south-western portion of the county, and nearly in the centre of the promontory which separates Cardigan bay from the bay of Carnarvon. It is of very considerable extent, and the lands are mostly enclosed and in a good state of cultivation : the surrounding scenery is pleasingly diversified, comprising some fine views of the adjacent country, which abounds with varied and picturesque beauty. At Pontrhyd Goch is a slate quarry, which, however, is worked only on a limited scale, the slates being of rather an inferior quality, and the demand for them confined principally to the immediate neighbour-hood. The road from Carnarvon to Pwllheli passes through the parish.