With the help of Gwin and Russian Ambassador Edward de Stoekl, he received an audience with President
Franklin Pierce in 1856 and impressed. As the new Commercial Agent for the Amur, he set sail toward
St Petersburg. There, he met Muraviev before travelling to Moscow where he attended the coronation of
Tsar Alexander II. On receipt of the relevant permits, he set out to
Irkutsk on the post road. By all accounts, he was impressed by Russia and charmed everyone he met with his enthusiasm for his hosts and their country. After Irkutsk, he met up with Muraviev again and headed to the southern border town of
Kyakhta where many drunken evenings ensued. He crossed over the border to the Chinese frontier town of Maimattschin and related in great detail the Mongol New Year celebration of the Feast of the Lanterns. The following spring, he headed east to Chita (
Chita, Russia) where he began his river journey on the
Ingoda River, a tributary of the Amur. All the while, he was thinking about business. As
Vilhjalmur Stefansson noted, "Collins the nineteenth-century Marco Polo, and Collins the poet of coal, timber, opals, sables and steamships, railroads and rubies were never allowed to interfere with Collins, the strict man of business." On July 10, he finally reached
Nikolayevsk-na-Amure. He was impressed. He saw this as the center of trade with eastern Siberia, Kamchatka, America, Japan and China. His round the world trip left him convinced that the Russians and Americans had much to achieve together. ==The origins of Russian American Telegraph==