If the note is in good condition, I'll buy it from you. I've been
collecting US coins on and off for years, and started on GB coinage when I
lived over there. Now I collect about everything, including currency, AND
WILL TRADE COMPUTER ITEMS FOR COINS AND CURRENCY!
Paul
On Fri, Jun 28, 2019 at 3:55 PM Steven M Jones via cctalk <
cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
On 06/28/2019 11:11, Alan Perry via cctalk wrote:
> Canada also replaced the $1- and $2-bill with coins (26.5mm and 28mm,
resp.).
Oh, I know. I was questioned by the RCMP for spending a $2 bill that was
in my
leftover Canadian cash from a previous trip years before.
Two weeks ago I was in London, and had brought my pound notes/coins from
a visit a few years earlier. When trying to buy lunch, the cashier
refused my ?10 note since new ?5 and ?10 notes had been issued over a
year before. I was advised I could change it at a bank...
So the next day I stopped at a Metro Bank outlet on my way to our local
office, but was told they'd only change notes for account holders --
which I can guarantee you I will now never be. But I was told I could go
to the Bank of England and they'd change it. The BoE was probably only
20 minutes away by Tube, but I wasn't trying to turn this exchange into
a side-quest. :^/
I still have the ?10 note. In theory I might be able to exchange it by
snail mail, but haven't looked into it yet...
--S.