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You have not provided a serial number or a place of issue, but you potentially have a note of value.
You have omitted the first 3 or 4 characters of the serial number and not provided the name of the Chief Cashier. Modern Bank of England One Pound notes were issued from 1928 to 1984. Please narrow down the possibilities a lot.
Because it is a long withdrawn banknote, the Bank of England will honour it to the value of Fifty Pounds. As far as any collector value is concerned, it would depend on the Chief Cashier, serial number and condition of the note.
Without knowing the serial number, your 1952 Bank of England white Five Pound note could fetch up to £200 GBP in mint condition. The Chief Cashier was P.S. Beale.
The Bank of England One Pound note was demonetised in 1988.
A Bank of England 1948(?) One Pound note (Series A - green)(Chief Cashier K.O. Peppiatt - serial T81A), circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £4 to £25 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
The banknote you describe does not exist. G.M. Gill was Chief Cashier of the Bank of England from 1988 to 1991. Please submit a new question including the serial number of the note.
No, it is different. Spain uses the Euro (€; code: EUR) whereas England (and all of the United Kingdom) uses the british Pound (GBP, represented by the pound sign £). The term originated in England as the value of a pound of silver.
The value of the pound is the same in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland although notes issued by Scottish and Northern Ireland banks aren't widely accepted by shops in England and Wales. The Republic of Ireland uses the Euro.
A Bank of England One Pound note (Series A - blue)((K.O. Peppiatt - serial B82H), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch anything up to £25 GBP. If it has been circulated but still in good condition, it might fetch anything from £4 to £12 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
A Bank of England Fifty Pound note (Series E - red)(Chief Cashier G.E. A. Kentfield - serial E16), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch anything up to £95 GBP. Alternatively, they are still worth Fifty Pounds if you return it to the Bank of England.A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Any value would depend greatly on the serial numbers. In mint condition, these notes have some value. A consecutively numbered series of 25 notes would have some additional value.