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1947 MG YA
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1953 MG TD
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1953 MG TF
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1966 MGB
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1976 MG Midget
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MG is a British marque that traditionally has produced sports cars from 1924 to 2005. MG originally stood for "Morris Garages", a dealer of Morris cars which began producing its own customised versions. Almost all "pure" MG's are two-seat open sports cars, but the brand has also been used to designate sportier versions of other models belonging to the same parent company.
History
There is some debate over when MG started. The company itself
believes it is 1924, although the first cars bore both Morris
and MG badges. Some disputing this believe that MG began in
1925.
From 1929 until 1980 the MG factory was in Abingdon, Oxfordshire.
As part of Morris, (itself part of the Nuffield Organisation),
MG was effectively absorbed into the British Motor Corporation
in 1952, and latterly British Leyland in 1968. The factory was
closed as part of the ruthless programme of cutbacks necessary
to turn BL around after the turbulent times of the 1970s.
MG is now part of the MG Rover Group based in Longbridge,
Birmingham. This Group went into receivership in 2005; the
future for English production- if not the brand- remains
uncertain.
There were various pre-war models built, not all of them sports
cars. MG built a name for itself in the early days of the sport
of international automobile racing. After World War II, MG
produced a line of cars known as the T-Series which were
exported worldwide achieving better-than-expected success. MG
departed from its earlier line of Y Type saloons and pre-war
designs and released the MGA in 1955. The MGB was released in
1962 to satisfy demand for a more modern and comfortable sports
car. In 1965 the fixed head coupé (FHC) followed: the MGB GT.
With continuous updates, the MGB was produced until 1980.
Between 1967 and 1969 a short-lived model called the MGC was
released. MG also began producing the MG Midget in 1961. The
Midget was a re-badged and redesigned Austin-Healey Sprite. As
with MGB's, the Midget design was frequently modified until it
was finally dropped in 1979.
The marque lived on after 1980 as British Leyland (later Austin
Rover Group), the then-owner, placed the MG badge on a number of
Austin saloons. In New Zealand, the MG badge even appeared on
the late 1980s’ Austin Montego estate, called the MG 2.0 Si
Wagon. There was a brief competitive history with a mid-engined,
six-cylinder version of the Metro.
In the late ’80s, ARG was renamed as the Rover Group and revived
the two-seater with the MG RV8, then in 1995 introduced the all
new MGF (redesigned and relaunched as the TF, reviving an old MG
name).
With the demerger of Rover from BMW in 1999, the MG name
appeared on sportier versions of the current Rover saloons and
the Rover 75 estate.
The MG Rover Group purchased Qvale, which had developed a new De
Tomaso Mangusta. This car, already approved for sale in the
United States, formed the basis of the MG XPower SV, an
"extreme" V8-engined sports car. It was revealed in 2002 and
went on sale in 2004.
As of 2003, the site of the former Abingdon factory was host to
McDonalds and the Thames Valley Police.
MG car production has been suspended since 7th April 2005 due to
the receivership of the MG Rover group. It is hoped that MG
production will continue, either at Longbridge or elsewhere, if
buyer for the marque is found. It has been rumored that Rover
production could also continue - possibly in China or Iran,
depending on where the company's buyer comes from.
