
The crew: In 1955, five Chinese fishermen and an American vice-consul set sail for the US from Taiwan's Keelung Harbour on a Chinese junk boat. Pictured, left to right, are Paul Chow, Hu "Huloo" Loo-chi, Calvin Mehlert, Reno Chen, Marco Chung and Benny Hsu.

A dream journey: The plan was to use their half-century-old junk boat to compete in an international yacht race from Newport, Rhode Island, to Gothenburg in Sweden.

Standing watch: The crew, lacking modern technology, took turns standing watch during the voyage. One would be assigned lookout and another on tiller.

Huloo's chicken ranch: Huloo, pictured, brought two chickens along for the journey. The hens each laid one egg per day.

Huloo's vegetable patch: He also brought a supply of fresh vegetables.

Before the trip: Lin (on the right) had to drop out prior to the journey, leaving them in need of a replacement crew member.

Bad weather: Not long after departing, they sailed into several severe typhoons and storms, which delayed their journey. The rest of the trip was relatively smooth in comparison.

Sponsors and donations: The crew sold everything they owned to buy the junk. After a newspaper reported on their story, more support came in. That included food donations from the Rotarians of Keelung and Taipei clubs, as seen here.

A long voyage: The junk boat arrived in San Francisco on August 8, 126 days after their initial departure from Keelung.

The 'test trip': Paul Chow, now 94, thought they should test their endurance and determination by cycling through the mountains of Taiwan with borrowed bikes before their cross-ocean voyage. Only Huloo and Marco Chung joined.

Headline news: Their journey was documented by different media, including the Oakland Tribute, in which this photograph made front page news.

China Camp, San Francisco: The five Chinese crew stand together in front of the Free China junk boat after arriving in San Francisco.

Free China: This is the last picture Paul Chow took of the Free China before the crew moved it onto land. It then passed through the hands of several owners.

A new home: About 50 years after Free China's journey, Dione Chen -- Reno Chen's daughter -- decided to look for the junk boat. Her family took a picture with the last owner of the junk, a man named Govinda, as well as his daughter, who Chen says was born on the ship.

40th anniversary: The crew went their separate ways after the journey but stayed in touch. They gathered and took this picture on the 40th anniversary of their trip. Benny was the only one missing -- he died in a car accident in the 1960s.