A Bank of England One Pound note (Chief Cashier J.Q. Hollom - Series C - green)(depending on the serial number), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch anything from £6 up to £90 GBP. If it has been circulated but still in good condition, it might fetch anything from £2 to £60 GBP.
If it has a genuine irregularity as a result of the printing process, it may get significantly more.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
The Bank of England One Pound note was demonetised in 1988.
Probably 30 pound to 50 pound, but it depends on how popular they are.-(famous they are.)
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.
sixteen thousand
6.3 Million Pounds
The Bank of England issued the last One Pound note in 1984, then withdrew and demonetised the One Pound note in 1988, after it was replaced by the One Pound coin in 1983.
You have not provided a serial number or a place of issue, but you potentially have a note of value.
Pound Sterling (£) (GBP) is the currency of the UK (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland). It's current value is approximately 1.50 US dollars and 1.16 Euros.
Around 800 thousand pound.(Probably more).
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.
The face value of anything is whatever is written on it. The face value of a Pound, is a Pound.