The career of the eleventh U.S. President reflected and fulfilled the young nation's commitment to westward expansion. The son of a North Carolina farmer and surveyor, James Knox Polk was ten years old when his family moved across the Appalachian Mountains. Growing up on the Tennessee frontier, he inherited his neighbors' work ethic, resourcefulness, and democratic ideals.
Although young James was accustomed to the rigors of frontier life, he lacked physical stamina. Shortly before his seventeenth birthday, he needed surgery for stones in his urinary bladder. The successful operation, performed by noted Kentucky surgeon Ephraim McDowell, enabled James to pursue an education with renewed enthusiasm.
After only two and a half years of formal schooling in Tennessee, James K. Polk was admitted to the University of North Carolina as a sophomore. His college studies and his membership in a debating society helped nurture his growing interest in law and government. He graduated with top honors in mathematics and the classics, and returned to Tennessee determined to become a lawyer. To receive legal training, he worked in the office of renowned Nashville trial attorney Felix Grundy and served as clerk of the Tennessee Senate. Diligent and ambitious, James soon established a law practice in Columbia, Tennessee.
Encouraged
by his early professional success, he turned his attention to politics.
At age twenty-seven, he defeated an incumbent for a seat in the Tennessee
Legislature. While serving as a State Representative, he courted and eventually
married Sarah Childress, the daughter of a prominent Murfreesboro merchant
and planter. An educated lady whose intellect and social grace impressed
contemporaries, Sarah became James K. Polk's personal and political confidante.
Her active involvement in her husband's campaigns helped ensure his victories.
Fervently supporting the policies of fellow Tennessee
Democrat Andrew Jackson, James K. Polk was
elected to the U.S. Congress at age twenty-nine. His Congressional career
lasted fourteen years and included two terms as Speaker of the House. While
working in Washington, he remained keenly interested in state politics.
Concerned that the Whig Party was becoming increasingly popular in Tennessee,
he returned home and successfully ran for the governorship. After one two-year
term, he twice failed to be re-elected. Although rivals reasonably assumed
that his political influence had peaked, James K. Polk stayed active in
Democratic politics and shrewdly sought opportunities to revive his career.
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