In the 18th century, early trails used by
Native Americans were gradually expanded to accommodate the westward expansion of Virginia colonists. The Three Chopt or
Three Notch'd Road had been established in the
Colony of Virginia between Richmond and the Shenandoah Valley by the 1740s. Most likely, the road followed an ancient
Monacan trail from the village of
Orapax (east of Richmond) to the western
Shenandoah Valley. This well-planned route required only one major river crossing, the
Rivanna at
Charlottesville, with inns or taverns spaced about 10 miles apart. By 1782, carriages could cross the Blue Ridge at Rockfish Gap. In 1818,
President of the United States James Monroe, former presidents
Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison, and
Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court John Marshall joined 24 other dignitaries at a meeting held in the Mountain Top Tavern at Rockfish Gap. Under Jefferson's leadership, they selected nearby
Charlottesville as the site of the new
University of Virginia. In 1854, the German landscape artist,
Edward Beyer, painted a landscape of Rockfish Gap and the Mountain House. ==Railroad, highway crossings==