Alexander Spotswood became acting
royal governor of Virginia in 1710, by which time pressure on the colony to expand had become more acute than ever. In 1716, Governor Spotswood, with about 50 other men and 74 horses, led an expedition up the
Rappahannock River valley (today called the Rapidan River) during westward exploration of the interior of Virginia. The journalist of this expedition was a
Huguenot, Lieut. John Fontaine, who served as an officer in the
British Army. The party included fourteen rangers and four
Meherrin Indians, and departed
Germanna on August 29, coming within sight of the
Blue Ridge Mountains on August 31. They continued upriver past today's
Stanardsville, reaching the head of the Rappahannock (today's Rapidan River) on September 2. Fontaine recorded in his journal for September 5 that axemen had to clear the way along the path of what he called the "James River", but which was in fact a creek along the eastern slope named Swift Run, surrounded on all sides by steep mountain terrain. Swift Run is part of the James River drainage system. The expedition had followed the Rappahannock drainage system up to this point. There they crossed the top ridge of the Blue Ridge mountains at
Swift Run Gap (elevation 2,365 feet). On September 6, 1716, they rode down into the
Shenandoah Valley on the east side of
Massanutten Mountain and reached the
Shenandoah River, which they called the "Euphrates" near the current town of
Elkton. There, they fired multiple volleys and drank special
toasts of
wine,
brandy, and
claret to the
King and to Governor Spotswood, naming the two peaks after them. The taller summit they called "Mount George", and the lesser, "Mount Spotswood". On the banks of the river they buried a bottle, inside which they had put a paper whereby Spotswood claimed the place in the name of George I. On September 7, the party returned home, reaching Germanna on September 10. After the journey, Spotswood gave each officer of the expedition a
stickpin made of
gold and shaped like a
horseshoe on which he had inscribed the words in
Latin "
Sic juvat transcendere montes", which translates into English as "Thus, it is pleasant to cross the mountains." The horseshoes were encrusted with small stones and were small enough to be worn from a watch chain. The members of Governor Spotswood's expedition soon became popularly known as the "Knights of the Golden Horseshoe." Of the expedition members, only the following are known by name to have taken part: Lt. Governor Spotswood, John Fontaine,
Robert Beverley, Jr., Major William Woodford, William Robertson, Dr. Robinson, Mr. Todd, James Taylor (great-grandfather of US Presidents
James Madison and
Zachary Taylor), Robert Brooke (grandfather of VA Governor
Robert Brooke),
George Mason III, Capt. Smith, William Clopton, Jr. (second son of William Clopton and Ann Booth Clopton), Jeremiah Clouder, and William Russell (Lt.-Col., Ranger, employed by Spotswood). Edward Sanders' 1839 will of descendant Elijah Sanders mentions great-grandfather "Old Edward Sanders" as a Knight of the Golden Horseshoe. In a Richmond news article, dated February 16, 1901, honoring John Bacon Clopton, the grandson of William Clopton, Jr.. The following is a copy of a handwritten statement, signed and sealed to be found among the John Bacon Clopton papers at Duke University Library, Durham, North Carolina: ==Legacy==