George Frederick Milnes' 'G.F. Milnes & Co Ltd' of Birkenhead (registered 10 Sept 1898) was a tramcar manufacturer who also had premises at Hadley, near Wellington, Shropshire. A previous venture, jointly with Albert Hughes, building tramcars at 227-241 Cleveland St, Birkenhead was dissolved in October 1898, but I think the premises were retained.
The company was wound up as per this notice in the London Gazette for 1 Sept 1903:
"In the Matter of the Companies Acts, and in the Matter
of GEORGE F. MILNES AND CO. Ltd. NOTICE is hereby given, that the creditors of the
above named Company are required, on or before
the 15th day of October next, to send in their names and
addresses, and particulars of their debts or claims, and
the names and addresses of their Solicitors (if any) to
Max Meyer, of the Castle Car Works, Hadley, near
Wellington, Shropshire, the Liquidator of the said Company
; and, if so required, by notice in writing from the
said Liquidator, are by their Solicitors, to come in
and prove their debts or claims at such time and
place as shall be specified in such notice, or in default
thereof they will be excluded from the benefit of any
distribution made before such debts are proved.—Dated
this 26th day of August, 1903.
F. J. LESLIE and CO., 15, Union-court, Castlestreet,
Liverpool, Solicitors to the above named
Liquidator."
Various suppliers and associates filed orders against GFM & Co shortly afterwards.
A consortium of businesses involving Thomas Tilling Ltd, W.A. Stevens & Co Ltd, and Sankey Ironfounders amongst others purchased the Castle Car Works in order to produce motor omnibuses (Tilling Stevens), the premises were ideal and there being a supply of suitably trained staff nearby (see below). Right at the last minute, when the deal was too late to be reversed, a clause was noticed in the sale that the works could not be used for the 'Construction of tramcars or vehicles that might compete with tramcars', the Milnes family retaining its tramcar works in Birkenhead at this time. Sankeys, later part of the GKN group, took on the factory and it subsequently produced cast iron baths, toilet cisterns and the like.
This is the factory site today.
Milnes took on the import of German Daimler commercial vehicles and chassis at a date unkown to me, similarly the British Damler company was formed to import and sell Daimler cars. (The latter also used the site of Carlyle Road Works for body production before selling it to BMMO).
Meanwhile Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft renamed its products, using the first name of their sales director's daughter - Mercedes Jellinek.
Yes Milnes would have built bodies for some of the British Milnes Daimlers, but not at Hadley after 1903.
Garcke's BET and the Loughborough based Brush company were taking control of non-municipal tramways, so Milnes' American-based tram designs soon fell from favour.
Wikipedia has this to say on the subject:
"The world's first motorised bus was built in Germany by Karl Benz in 1895, some years before Gottlieb Daimler also started to build and sell buses in Germany as well. By 1898 both Karl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler, then rivals, were exporting their buses to Wales and England. Soon Daimler products were sold in the British Empire in a partnership with the British company Milnes. Milnes-Daimler developed a double-decker in 1902 and provided a bus for the first motorised bus service in the United Kingdom the following year. Though the company met success in selling buses throughout the British Empire, the partnership between Daimler and Milnes had to be undone due to the First World War."
Re the Llandudno connection, there were several (horse and motor) coach propreitors in the district, several using 'motor', 'coaching' and/or 'touring' in their names. Several used colours, too - Royal Blue, Royal Red, Whiteways, Purple (Bethesda), etc. I don't think we can link up Motor Touring with anyone else we know in the area.