Latham hoped his letters would promote international understanding, but also reflected on the position of indigenous and Black Americans.The British barrister Henry Lathams thoughtful letters from his three-month tour of the United States were first published in 1867. His intention was to encourage other English people to visit their American cousins and thereby promote international understanding. He also reflected upon the position of indigenous and Black Americans.The British barrister Henry Lathams thoughtful letters from his three-month tour of the United States were first published in 1867. His intention was to encourage other English people to visit their American cousins and thereby promote international understanding. He also reflected upon the position of indigenous and Black Americans.The British barrister Henry Latham's thoughtful letters, describing three months he spent in the United States, were published in 1867. His intention in recording the details of his travels was to encourage other Englishmen and women to visit their American cousins and make their own judgements as to their true manner and spirit. He expressed the hope that greater social contact would foster better understanding between the two nations. Latham remarked that Americans of that period were far more hospitable and hearty than the English, and observed that there existed in the land of freedom a highly motivating suspicion that contentment was a spurious kind of virtue invented by the English aristocracy. To his accounts of cities from Niagara and New York to Atlanta and New Orleans, Latham added supplementary chapters reflecting on the chances of survival for Black and indigenous Americans.1. Liverpool; 2. To New York; 3. To Philadelphia; 4. To Baltimore; 5. To Washington; 6. To Richmond; 7. To Petersburg; 8. To Norfolk; 9. To Charleston; 10. To Augusta; 11. To Atlanta; 12. To Mobile; 13. To New Orleans; 14. To San Jaques; 15. To New Orleans; 16. To Havanna; 17. To New York; 1l“\