The Kynoch Press was an English-based fine press in Witton, Birmingham, founded in 1876 as a company press for Kynoch, a British manufacturer of ammunition. Initially, the press was used to print packaging. The press closed in 1981.
To manage publicity, the company set it up as a fine press, which, when Kynoch became Imperial Chemical Industries Limited (ICI) in 1929, continued as a division and kept its name, The Kynoch Press. The Kynoch Press not only handled the firm's printing, but performed independent work, operating at times like a small press, and at other times like a fine press, and yet at other times like a private press.
From 1900 to 1921, H. Donald Hope brought the press recognition; and from 1922 to 1933, the press commissioned leading artists, including Eric Ravilious and Tirzah Garwood. During this time, Herbert Simon (1898–1974) (de), who from 1919 to 1922 had worked for William Edwin Rudge, expanded on Hope's achievements, until 1933, when he moved-on to join his brother, Oliver Simon, OBE (1895–1956), at the Curwen Press. The following four years, from 1934 to 1938, were unfruitful under the leadership of H. V. Davis. Then, from 1938 to 1945, Michael Clapham (1912–2002) oversaw the press during sparse years of World War II and managed to launch Endeavor, a quarterly scientific journal; then, from 1945 to 1958, John "Jock" Kennedy brought the press to the forefront of the industry by focusing on design; then, from 1959 to 1976, Wallis Heath was managing director and sought, through exporting and computer lithographic advances, to find a niche for the midsized publisher within the changing market; then, from 1976 to 1981, Harry Wainwright was managing director, but was directed to sell the press. In 1979, Wainwright found a suitable buyer, Gilmer and Dean, but the press closed in 1981 under the duress of a failed management buyout due in part to the union's unwillingness to accept any layoffs. The press closed in 1981.
Published by Constable & Company, Ltd.; printed by The Kynoch Press (1930); edited and introduction by Samuel Joseph Looker (1888–1965), color drawings by Lesley Blanch
Octavo, 58 pages, 750 copies, maroon cloth; other editions: Richard R. Smith, Inc., publications, of New York (né Richard Roy Smith; 1885–1957) (acquired Ray Long & Richard R. Smith, Inc., in 1959 by William Lathrop Bauhan; 1929–2006), produced an American edition in 1931
The poems illustrate the spirit of horse racing at (i) the St Leger Stakes at the Doncaster Racecourse in South Yorkshire and (ii) the Melton Racecourse, next to Burton Lazars, Leicestershire, which was ploughed-up during World War I
Supplement No. 1: Types added during 1934 (1935), pps. 161–172
Supplement No. 2: Types added during 1935 (1936), pps. 173–180
Supplement No. 3: Types added since 1935 (1938), pps. 181–183
Harry Carter, then working for The Kynoch Press, sent a copy to Jan van Krimpen in 1934 (letter from Museum Enschedé: "Carter to Van Krimpen," February 1934). Carter was probably responsible for the layout of the specimens.