| Membership
in the Polk Memorial Association
Shortly after James K. Polk's death in 1849, his widow adopted
the young daughter of a niece who had died recently. The child,
Sarah Jetton, grew up at Mrs. Polk's Nashville home and provided
companionship for the former First Lady. When the girl married local
merchant George William Fall, Mrs. Polk persuaded the couple to
live with her.
When Mrs. Polk died in 1891, her beloved great-niece inherited
many family possessions including White House items. To call attention
to James K. Polk's overlooked accomplishments, Mrs. Fall planned
public exhibitions of the President's personal belongings and political
memorabilia. In 1924, her daughter Saidee Fall Grant founded the
James K. Polk Memorial Association to continue efforts to collect,
preserve, and display Polk artifacts.
Although the Association originally exhibited its collections at
several locations in Nashville, the organization recognized that
James K. Polk's surviving home in Columbia, Tennessee would be an
ideal site for a Presidential museum. In 1929, the Association helped
the State of Tennessee raise funds to purchase the house. The State
assumed ownership of the historic home; the Association agreed to
maintain the property and display its artifacts there.
In accordance with its original mission statement, the James K.
Polk Memorial Association works to "perpetuate the memory of
the eleventh President of the United States." If you would
like to join the Association or support its projects, please email
us at jameskpolk@bellsouth.net.
Membership is open to anyone regardless of race, creed, sex, or
nationality.
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