Robert Smail's Printing Works

The firm was established in 1866, carrying out print jobs for the local community as well as operating a stationer's shop, and between 1893 and 1916 published a weekly newspaper.

It remained in the ownership of the Smail family, who made little effort to keep up with twentieth-century advances in technology, and, through an initiative from Innerleithen Community Council, led by Iain Henderson and Nettie Watson, was run by the third-generation owner Cowan Smail until he retired and the property was acquired by the National Trust for Scotland in 1986 and opened to the public in 1990.

[1] Visitors are given a one-hour tour showing the various stages of the process as well as a chance to try hand typesetting, and at certain times the opportunity to print their own work.

A large desk at the office window has the clutter typical of the early twentieth century, drawers contain stationery including writing slates, pencils, sealing wax, pen nibs and bottles of ink.

Wall shelves store job dockets, invoices, wages books and ledgers dating back to the start of the business.

A two-storey frontage faces the main street, with the office to the right and the shop on the left.
The shop is now the main entrance; the door to its right leads to the office.
The caseroom
A composing stick on top of a lower letter case of movable type (image is not of the museum)
One end of the machine room