You do not specify the Chief Cashier or the type of One Pound note.
A Bank of England One Pound note beginning with Serial 37J could have been -
1934 - Chief Cashier K.O. Peppiatt - Series A green - Britannia on the front and the Bank of England building on the reverse.
1960 - Chief Cashier L.K. O'Brien - Series C green - QEII on the front and Britannia on the reverse.
197? - Chief Cashier J.B. Page - Series D green - QEII on the front and Isaac newton on the reverse.
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.
The Bank of England currently issues Five Pound, Ten Pound, Twenty Pound and Fifty Pound notes for Britain, plus a variety of banknotes for a number of other countries.
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.
St George appears on many different British pre-1960 One Pound notes, incuding H.M. Treasury notes and Bank of England notes. Pinning it down to a particular One Pound note would require the name of the Chief Cashier.
yes
The currency of the UK is the Pound Sterling (or more normally, just Pound). The Bank of England produces all of the banknotes for England and Wales, whilst several banks in Northern Ireland and Scotland produce notes to their own designs. Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man also issue their own notes. The only notes in current issue in England are £5, £10, £20 and £50. Scotland, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man also have £1 notes. Scotland and Northern Ireland also issue £100 notes.
The Bank of England One Pound was last issued in 1984 and was withdrawn in 1988 after the introduction of the One Pound coin in 1983.
See the Bank of England link below.
Therre are no "red indians" on Bank of England Five Pound notes.
You do not provide the serial numbers. J.B. Page was Chief Cashier from 1970 to 1980. Depending on the serial number, mint condition Bank of England One Pound notes from this period could fetch anything from £5 to £50 GBP. A set of nine sequential mint notes would most likely attract a higher value. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation based on inspection of the notes.
The "Pound", as a circulating unit of currency, was first issued by the Bank of England in 1797. They did not last very long and were superceded by the gold Sovereign in 1817. The first regular issue of One Pound notes was by His Majesty's Treasury in 1914. The Bank of England resumed the minting of the One Pound note in 1928.
Bank of England banknotes currently in circulation include the 5, 10, 20 and 50 Pound notes. See the link below for images of current Bank of England banknotes.