5 Cents to Spare

A 1936 Around The World Travel Adventure

by Larry S. Kramm


Formats

Softcover
£12.50
Softcover
£12.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 17/09/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 8.25x11
Page Count : 236
ISBN : 9780759629431

About the Book

This book is about my father’s 10 month around the world travel adventure in 1936. He visited some 20 countries, traveling by bicycle loaded with camping gear, second and third class train, bus, ship, motor lorry, riverboat, and hiking. His greatest adventure was a 500 mile hike along the Burma Trail from Burma through China to Hanoi.

Wherever my father went he aroused the curiosity of the local people and the suspicions of the authorities. He recorded pre WW-II viewpoints of the towns' people and fellow travelers on social, political, educational, and economic matters. He bedded down in guesthouses, youth hostels, YMCA’s, or camped out. He recorded some of his story with over 1,000 photographs.

Over a 15 year period, I transcribed my father’s handwritten diaries. There were many duplicated entries because much of his diaries consisted of letters home to family and friends. Most of these letters contained accounts about the same thing, but each either had a different twist or some new activity altogether. My biggest job was to eliminate all the duplication, fit together the different twists, and to put it all together into a logical timeline.

In my first effort to transcribe I used a manual typewriter, before the personal computer was available. About the time I finished, I bought my first PC, an IBM XT. I re-entered all my typewritten pages into the computer. As the years went on I got better and better computers, copying my father’s adventure into each, making more changes along the way. Eventually I put together a 31 chapter book with 166 photographs.

My father (and my mother) passed away in 1994. It had always been his wish to find a way to publish his travels so that others may see the world as he saw it.

Larry S. Kramm

Antioch, California

July 1999


About the Author

Alfred H. Kramm was born Jan 17, 1910 in Sacramento, California. His father was of German heritage who immigrated to San Francisco in 1905 just in time for the San Francisco Earthquake. A few months after Alfred was born, his father moved the family to Grass Valley, California, to establish a watch making business

Alfred grew up in Grass Valley where he met and married Margret Harshaw in August 1937, six months after he returned from his trip around the world. In 1933 he received a BA Degree in Architecture from the University of California at Berkeley. Post graduate work led to becoming a Registered Professional Civil Engineer in 1953.

Alfred took a position in 1937 with the Shell Oil Co. in San Francisco as a draftsman. Later he became an engineer working in Portland, Oregon and Long Beach, California. In 1953 he was promoted to Senior Civil Engineer and transferred to the Manufacturing Division at the Wilmington-Domingues Shell Oil Refinery near Long Beach, California, where he lived for the rest of his life.

Alfred retired from Shell Oil in 1968 and continued to live in Long Beach. He was active in many activities mostly centered around rock hounding and various California State advisory committees on recreational land uses.

Alfred passed away on June 7, 1994 after several years of getting blood transfusions for refractory anemia. He died in his sleep at home. Before he died, he made a specific addition to his will giving his son, Larry S. Kramm, the sole rights to his world trip diaries and photographs. The two of them had been working for several years prior on refining the notes and documenting the photographs. It had always been Alfred’s desire to someday publish his adventure.

Larry S. Kramm, eldest son of Alfred, was born July 6, 1940 in Portland, Oregon. He received a BA Degree in Sociology in June 1962. A tour of duty in the US Air Force as a personnel officer with the ranks of 2nd and 1st Lieutenant followed.

In July 1966 Larry accepted a position with Chevron Oil in Seattle as a Credit Representative. It was through a fellow worker that Larry met and married on April 13, 1968, Shirley Hill. In August 1969 he was transferred to Chevron’s offices in Concord and a few years later purchased a new home in the nearby city of Antioch, California.

In September 1981, after 15 years as a credit/collection representative, Larry accepted a position as a Data Storage Analyst for Chevron Information Technology Co. He worked in that position for the next 16 years and retired in August 1977 after 31 years working for Chevron. In his retirement Larry set about to finalize the book.