If the note is in mint condition - value would be around £8 - £10. Answered by Pam West (Bank Note Dealer)
These notes are potentially still in circulation so, unless they are Uncirculated and in absolute mint condition, they are worth Ten Pounds. A Bank of England Ten Pound note (Series E - orange)(Chief Cashier Merlyn Lowther - serial BJ01), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch anything up to £20 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
You do not specify the Chief Cashier, or a particular design. I cannot identify the serial numbers amongst the ranges of withdrawn banknotes, so presumably, they are current banknotes, worth Five Pounds at worst. Consecutively numbered groups of banknotes, especially in mint condition, will usually achieve a value greater than an individual banknote. If they are current banknotes, keep them until this particular design is withdrawn and the value should start to increase.
The white five pound note was withdrawn in 1957 and ceased being legal tender on 13 March 1961. Simon Holmes
They were not issued after 1984 and demonitized in 1988.
Scottish bank notes aren't withdrawn they are simply removed from circulation and are replaced by new ones when they are worn out
The Bank of England One Pound was last issued in 1984 and was withdrawn in 1988 after the introduction of the One Pound coin in 1983.
Australia did have a One Hundred Pound note first issued in 1914 and again in 1924. They were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
The short answer is no. The Elgar Twenty Pound note was withdrawn from circulation on 30-June-2010 and the grace period has long since expired. The Bank of England will always honour withdrawn banknotes. See the link below for instructions.
The Australian Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
Because it is a long withdrawn banknote, the Bank of England will honour it to the value of Fifty Pounds.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.
In mid-2002, the Bank of England withdrew a batch of Five Pound notes due to the ink on the serial numbers smudging and being able to be rubbed off.
it is two pound and the rest of the numbers are part of a Pound