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                                                                 POUND BANKNOTES IN POST INDEPENDENCE BRITISH AFRICA

Many of the former British colonies continued to use pound notes after independence before issuing  national currencies. From the former British West Africa, three out of the four countries continued to use the pound after independence.Gambia(1965),Ghana(1957), and Nigeria(1960),The exception being Sierra Leone(1961),which adopted the Leone from the onset. Within a few years of independence they also changed,to Dalasis,Cedis,and Naira respectively.

GAMBIA POUNDS,                           GHANA POUNDS,                 NIGERIA POUNDS,

A similar sequence took place on the East coast of Africa. However the monetary issues of British East Africa were tied to the shilling rather than  the pound; this includes Kenya,Uganda andTanganyika (now Tanzania).

Further south Malawi (formerly Nyasaland), and Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) and Southern Rhodesia which became Rhodesia and eventually Zimbabwe in 1980 continued to use pound denominations

MALAWI POUNDS,                          RHODESIA POUNDS ,            ZAMBIA POUNDS,

Although we have a similar post independence pattern occurring in six former colonies we have a marked variation occurring in today's valuations ,which it raises the question on the validity of current market and catalog prices?

                        POST INDEPENDENT POUND ISSUES WITH CURRENT UNC DOLLAR CATALOG PRICES (2010)

                                             ONE POUND                                                FIVE POUNDS                              CURRENCY NOW

GAMBIA                                     150                                                                  300                                                 DALASIS

GHANA                                      60                                                                      200                                                CEDIS

NIGERIA                                      8                                                                     350                                                 NAIRA

MALAWI                                   350                                                                   1200                                                 KWACHA

RHODESIA                              650                                                                    750                                                  POUND

ZAMBIA                                    900                                                                    2500                                                 KWACHA

What are the reasons for this wide disparity, almost certainly not the rarity of individual notes nor the devaluation of the currencies, or the note content (we have both heads of state and African wildlife). More probably it is the current collector base and as this evolves over time we can expect the West African notes to increase in value more rapidly as local collectors increase in affluence and awareness; and begin to search for,  and collect objects of their past history?