This region was also known as Corne de Cerf, Elkhorn Prairie, Elkhorn Point and Ayres Point.[1] Prairie, forest, and bottom land were not far apart here. The "Meadow-in-the-Hole" was a singular little meadow, fifty or sixty yards wide, located on a "dry branch" of the Elkhorn and thirty feet lower than the surrounding forests—at what is now Oakdale on the Elkhorn.[2] From the present Oakdale the pathway ran from Elkhorn Prairie through Nashville Prairie, circling half a mile to the north and northeast of Nashville, Washington County. Turning to the east here, it coursed onward to a celebrated "point" of woods called Grand Point, near the present Grand Point Creek, section 32, township 2, south range 1W, two miles and a half northwest of Richview, Washington County.[3] From thence it circled northeast through section 9 in Grand Prairie Township, the extreme northwest township of Jefferson County.[4] The second night's camp may