In 1919, Charles Kenilworth (âC.K.â) Shepherdâa veteran of World War I and former British Royal Air Force Captainâtook some âtime offâ after his service. He traveled to the United States to âtrot âround Americaâ on a brand new, top-of-the-line Henderson 4-cylinder motorcycle he dubbed âLizzie.â Just eleven days after arriving in the States, Shepherd and Lizzie headed west on a pioneer adventure. He journeyed to California on Americaâs âhighways,â which he soon realized consisted of dirt roadsâseveral of which were impassable. After arriving in San Francisco two months later, he sold his motorcycle on the street. In 1922, he memorialized this journey for eternity in his book Across America by Motor-Cycle.
Shepherdâs tale is an informative and engaging reflection of the trials and tribulations of an Englishmanâs solo adventure across the United States when there were no such things as interstate highways or even good street maps. His honest observations about Americaâs roads, history, and cultureâthrough the lens of a British âobserverââare revealing and often humorous. One hundred years later, Shepherdâs book remains a classic.
Mark Hunnibellâa former United States Air Force Captainâdiscovered Shepherdâs book while beginning to restore his own âbasket caseâ 1919 Henderson motorcycle that his father had given him decades earlier. Realizing it was the same make, model, and year owned by Shepherd, Hunnibell imagined retracing Shepherdâs journey. But Hunnibell realized such a major feat would go well beyond mechanical restoration. He had to get the old Henderson functioning like new to contemplate such an arduous expedition, but he also had to deduce Shepherdâs path when the British adventurer had not included a map or specific itinerary. Hunnibell set about analyzing the book word-by-word in a bold attempt to discover, document, and reverse-engineer the smallest details of Shepherdâs ride.
As the research progressed, revelations of Shepherdâs route and other amazing details emerged while Hunnibell also became fascinated by C.K.âs cultural reflections. Hunnibell also realized that the British explorer had an occasional tendency to embellish, apparently hoping it would make his book even more appealing.
It occurred to Hunnibell that readers of C.K.âs 1922 bookâand even new onesâwould be even more inspired and entertained by the journey if they had the benefit of a complete and accurate explanation of as many details as possible. He sought to answer fundamental questions such as: Who was âC.K. Shepherdâ and what was his background? Why did he embark on this trip? Whatever happened to him?
This Fully Annotated Centennial Edition contains nearly 1,000 exhaustively researched notes, original photographs (many previously unpublished that had been taken by Shepherd himself), illustrations, and rich period details and explanations. It also contains a foreword by C.K.âs son, Dr. Charles Drury Shaw, who has graciously supported this celebration.
Although some details of Shepherdâs journey will forever remain a mystery, this Fully Annotated Centennial Editionâwhich includes the complete text of the original bookâstands as the definitive work on the subject.