A typical English growler, who thinks America "the most disagreeable of all disagreeable countries;" nevertheless, he says of the Ohio, "a finer thousand miles of river scenery could hardly be found in the wide world."
_Mackay, Alex._ The Western world; or, travels in the United States in 1846-47. London, 1849.
Good for its character sketches, glimpses of slavery, and report of economic conditions.
_Robertson, James._ A few months in America [winter of 1853-54].
London, n. d.
Chiefly statistical.
_Murray, Charles Augustus._ Travels in North America. London, 1854, 2 vols.
Vol. I has the Ohio-river trip. The author is an appreciative Englishman, and tells his story well.
_Murray, Henry A._ Lands of the slave and the free. London, 1855, 2 vols.
In Vol. I is an account of an Ohio-river voyage.
_Ferguson, William._ America by river and rail [in 1855]. London, 1856.
_Lloyd, James T._ Steamboat directory, and disasters on the Western waters. Cincinnati, 1856.
Valuable for stories and records of the early days of river transportation.
_Anonymous._ A short American tramp in the fall of 1864. By the editor of "Life in Normandy." Edinburgh, 1865.
An English geologist"s journal. Distorted and overdrawn, on the travel side. He took steamer from St. Louis to Cincinnati.
_Bishop, Nathaniel H._ Four months in a sneak-box. Boston, 1879.
The author, in the winter of 1875-76, voyaged in an open boat from Pittsburg to New Orleans, and along the Gulf coast to Florida.