Good question, Iāll try to keep the answer short
When the Church of England split from Rome, Henry VIII kept most of the Catholic liturgy and practice (i.e. The Mass). Later rulers wanted to bring the CofE more in line with the other reformed European churches. The 1662 Book of Common Prayer, still the CofEās foundation document, is very anti-Catholic, denying the real presence, the intercession of saints, banning tabernacles and the mixing of water and wine and the elevation of the host in the Eucharist etc.
In the 19th century, a movement called the Oxford Movement or Tractarian movement under John Henry Newman (now bl. John Henry Newman) started to reassert the Catholic heritage of the CofE, which included a return to Catholic practices, vestments etc which had been previously banned.
So the CofE now has two wings, broadly speaking - the reformed who are much more in line with other Protestant churches and Anglo-Catholics, who follow Catholic practice, often use the Roman Missal, venerate the saints and Our Lady at places such as Walsingham but, for whatever reason, canāt bring themselves to cross the Tiber. Itās a cause of a lot of internal tension. One parish might believe in the real presence, the priesthood - the next door one believes in memorial meals and elected leaders.
Hope that helps