No. All British banknotes are made at the Bank of England. The Royal Mint makes the coins.
The Royal Mint is a British Government owned company.
British West African Shillings were minted in one of three places -Royal Mint London - No Mint markKing's Norton, Birmingham - KNHeaton Mint, Birmingham - H
In modern times, the British Sovereign has been minted since 1817. Of the coins minted during this period, including Sovereigns minted at the Royal Mint London, Bombay Mint, Melbourne Mint, Ottawa Mint, Perth Mint, Pretoria Mint and Sydney Mint, many of them are considered to be "Extremely Rare". There are too many to list here.
There were about 10,041,000 British 1904 Sovereigns minted at the Royal Mint London (no mintmark). There were about 3,743,000 British 1904 Sovereigns minted at the Melbourne Mint (mintmark = M to the right of the date). There were about 4,506,000 British 1904 Sovereigns minted at the Perth Mint (mintmark = P to the right of the date). There were about 2,986,000 British 1904 Sovereigns minted at the Sydney Mint (mintmark = S to the right of the date).
There were no British Twopences produced by the Royal Mint in 1801.
There is no need for a mint mark, they were all minted at the same place, The Royal Mint at Llantrisant, Wales. All British coins have been minted at Llantrisant since 1976.
British 1875 Farthings minted at the Royal Mint (no mintmark) - 712,760 minted. British 1875 Farthings minted at the Heaton Mint (mintmark = H) - 6,092,800 minted.
KN is the mint mark on coins made by the King's Norton Metal Company under contract from the British Royal Mint.
The Royal Mint produced 6,382,793 British Sixpences.
The Royal Mint produced no British Threepences from 1801 to 1833 inclusive.
The Royal Mint advises that 469,207,800 British Pennies were minted in 2009.