Yes all Scottish notes are legal tender throughout the UK, that is in England, Northern Ireland and Wales. Actually no. Scottish and Northern Irish notes may be used in any part of the UK and as they are marked Sterling, most shops will accept them. They are not legal tender however. Legal tender is a misunderstood term and does not refer to whether money is currency that can be used. Scottish and Northern Irish sterling notes are not legal tender in any part of the UK. No banknote is legal tender in Scotland or N. Ireland in fact! This money is issued by retail banks and is classed as a promissory note not Legal Tender. The expression Legal Tender is to do with debt payment laws and refers to a form of payment that is legally always acceptable. In England and Wales the only legal tender is money issued by the Bank of England and no note is Legal Tender in Scotland or Northern Ireland including their own notes. There is quite a good discussion of this on the Royal Mint banknote site.
The $50 Bill? Yes.
No, Scottish banknotes never were legal tender, and Scotland is the only place where they will be accepted. The currency of Scotland is the Pound Sterling (GBP). All Scottish banks have the right to produce their own banknotes, but only three do. Strangely, all Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere including Scotland. They have more of the standing of a promissory note (in Scotland) and there is a strange legal loop hole in Scottish law that allows this to occur, fortunately. This is simply wrong. Scottish and Northern Ireland banknotes should be accepted within the UK but if accepted outside Scotland, they are returned by UK banks to Scotland. The fact that many have the word "sterling" on them is the biggest clue here. I have frequently spent Scottish currency in England.
No
it is not legal tender
Irish banknotes are not legal tender in Great Britain. Northern Irish banknotes are not legal tender in England and Wales, but by mutual agreement between the banks, are considered as "acceptable tender".
Older U.S. currency is still legal tender at face value, but may be worth more to collectors. Note: silver certificates are no longer redeemable for silver (likewise with gold certificates).
The name of the eagle on the legal tender note is called the Golden Eagle. This was to represent the national bird and the strength of the united country.
Scottish banknotes are not legal tender anywhere in the UK including Scotland, where the have the status of a Prommissory note. The Royal Bank of Scotland is the only bank still producing a One Pound note in Scotland. The notes are acceptable in Scotland. There is an agreement in place between banks, and the Scottish One Pound note should be accepted by English banks, but might be accepted by business and trades people in England.
No. The One Pound note ceased to be legal tender in March 1988.
Northern Ireland and Scottish banknotes are issued by commercial banks rather than a central banking authority and therefore have the status of a promissory note rather than legal tender. By agreement between the banks of the United Kingdom, all banknotes are treated as legal tender. However, shopkeepers and other business people are not obliged to accept Northern Ireland and Scottish banknotes.
The British £1 note was withdrawn by the Bank of England in 1984 but it is still printed and issued by the Royal Bank of Scotland. The Scottish version is still legal tender in Scotland and in theory in the rest of the UK, however it is not widely accepted outside Scotland, the English version is still exchangeable for £1 in cash at the Bank of England in London and some larger UK banks. Though not part of the UK, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man still circulate a £1 note.