For any who may not be aware of it, there is a great map of Pendleton District made in 1820. This can be found here: http://scroots.org/1825pendleton3.html It is very large so will take a while to load. I was lucky enough to find my ancestor's name on the map. If you page down about 1-1/2 pages, you will see "Horse Shoe Robertson's". James "Horse Shoe Robertson" still lived in Pendleton District when this map was made. In 1822, he moved to Tuscaloosa Co. AL. His stories, which he apparently loved to tell, were the basis for the historical novel "Horse Shoe Robinson", well known to history buffs in the area (for one thing, it has caused them lots of confusion!). For those familiar with the area, it may well be relevant that HS's house is shown N of the road rather than S of the road as would be the case for the house still standing (about 3 mi w. of Westminster SC on Horseshoe Bridge Road) that is said to be HS's old house. About 2 miles upriver from Horse Shoe, you will find Shead's Mill. This is almost certainly the property of Wm. Shed, Horse Shoe's brother-in-law. Wm. remained in Oconee until after his wife's death and moved to TN as an old man to live with his son. You need bear in mind that the top of this map is NW rather than N. Since there was only a single "town" and virtually no communities as we know them today, most of the locations are name of the people who lived there. There are a number of mills shown and one "rifle gun factory". You need bear in mind that almost every place a road crossed a stream that it was a ford (or ferry) and not a bridge. I was puzzled that it did not show a location for Col. Benjamin Cleveland who I thought lived there. There is a Cleveland Shoals on the Georgia line. It is part of the 1825 Mills Atlas found on Steven Coker's excellent SCRoots.org page. The maps page is: http://scroots.org/places.html