We present the results of 450 and 850 mum continuum mapping of the H II reg
ion KR 140 using the Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) inst
rument on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). KR 140 is a small (5.7
pc diameter) H II region at a distance of 2.3 +/- 0.3 kpc. Five of the six
IRAS point sources near KR 140 were mapped in this study. Our analysis show
s that two of these IRAS sources are embedded late B-type stars lying well
outside the H II region, two are a part of the dust shell surrounding the H
II region, and one is the combined emission from an ensemble of smaller so
urces unresolved by IRAS. We have discovered a number of relatively cold su
bmillimeter sources not visible in the IRAS data, ranging in size from 0.2
to 0.7 pc and in mass from 0.5 to 130 M.. The distribution of masses for al
l sources is well characterized by a power law N(>M) proportional to M-alph
a with alpha = 0.5 +/- 0.04, in agreement with the typical mass function fo
r clumped structures of this scale in molecular clouds. Several of the subm
illimeter sources are found at the H II molecular gas interface and have pr
obably been formed as the result of the expansion of the H II region. Many
of the submillimeter sources we detect are gravitationally bound and most o
f these follow a mass-size relationship expected for objects in virial equi
librium with nonthermal pressure support. Upon the loss of nonthermal suppo
rt, they could be sites of star formation. Along with the two B stars that
we have identified as possible cluster members along with VES 735, we argue
that five nearby highly reddened stars are in a pre-main-sequence stage of
evolution.