Sarah Childress Polk | |
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First Lady of the United States | |
In role March 4, 1845 – March 4, 1849 | |
President | James K. Polk |
Preceded by | Julia Tyler |
Succeeded by | Margaret Taylor |
First Lady of Tennessee | |
In role October 14, 1839 – October 15, 1841 | |
Governor | James K. Polk |
Preceded by | Rachel Cannon |
Succeeded by | Sarah Jones |
Personal details | |
Born | Sarah Childress (1803-09-04)September 4, 1803 Murfreesboro, Tennessee, U.S. |
Died | August 14, 1891(1891-08-14) (aged 87) Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. |
Resting place | Tennessee State Capitol Nashville, Tennessee |
Spouse | |
Relations | Sarah Polk Fall (grandniece) |
Education | Salem Academy |
Signature | ![]() |
Sarah Childress Polk (September 4, 1803 – August 14, 1891) was thefirst lady of the United States from 1845 to 1849. She was the wife of the 11thpresident of the United States,James K. Polk.
Well educated in a successful family, Sarah met her future husband at a young age. They never had children of their own, though they did foster relatives. Socially keen and well informed, Sarah helped her husband's career with her hosting skills and advised him on political matters at times, though she stayed out of the public limelight. Following her husband's death in 1849, Sarah had a 42-year widowhood, the longest of any First Lady.
Sarah Childress was born in 1803 to Elizabeth Whitsitt and Joel Childress, a prominentplanter, merchant, and land speculator—the third of their six children. She was well educated for a woman of her time and place, attending the exclusiveMoravians'Salem Academy inWinston-Salem, North Carolina in 1817, one of the few institutions of higher learning available to women in the early 19th century.
Sarah Childress metJames K. Polk while both were receiving instruction from Samuel P. Black at hishouse inMurfreesboro, Tennessee; he was 19, she was 12. They would be formally introduced in the early 1820s with Polk's involvement with the State Legislature. Shortly after he began courting her, legend saysAndrew Jackson called her "wealthy, pretty, ambitious, and intelligent," and urged Polk to marry her.[1] In 1823 the two became engaged, and on January 1, 1824, Sarah Childress, aged 20, married James Polk, aged 28, at the plantation home of the bride's parents nearMurfreesboro.
They remained married for 25 years, but never had children. This is often attributed to the bladder stone surgery Polk had as a young man, which is thought to have made him sterile. They were the only presidential couple to never have children while together, biologically, adopted or from previous marriage.[2] They raised a nephew, Marshall Tate Polk (1831–1884), as their ward for a few years before James sent him to a school inWashington, D.C., and laterGeorgetown University.[3] After her husband's death, Sarah would foster her great-niece,Sarah Polk Fall (1847–1924).
During his political career, Polk assisted her husband with his speeches, using her insight to guide his outlines and provide needed assurance. She accompanied her husband as often as she could whenever he made trips to Washington and made sure to take an active political role. She even copied down his correspondence and developed notable social skills. Mrs. Polk was not a woman who chose to proclaim her sentiment openly, striving to maintain a humble demeanor. It was her husband himself who declared that his most active supporter and critique was his wife. She also gave him advice on policy matters and played an active role in his campaigns. Mrs. Polk maintained correspondence with national leaders gaining access to global issues that were relevant to her husband's campaign.
She was one of the first president's wives to take an active role in her husband's electoral process and campaign itself. Not only did she keep up with this measure of communication, but she also wrote for a local newspaper expressing her support for James Polk's administration and his proposed policy initiatives. One of the more controversial topics she was able to write about was on the idea of expansionism which delved into the concept of manifest destiny pertaining to the United States' rights as a sovereign power. In Washington as a congressman's wife during the administrations ofJohn Quincy Adams,Andrew Jackson, andMartin Van Buren, Polk very much enjoyed her social duties. Mrs. Polk was a religious woman who openly refused to dance, attend horse races, or theater. She took great pride in being a sociable woman but maintained a great sense of integrity. Though she did not drink herself, she made sure to serve a decadent selection of drinks and assorted foods during promotional dinners being the queen of hospitality. She was a woman who "enjoyed wide popularity as well as deep respect". In 1830 she risked a breach with Jackson, her husband's mentor, by taking part in the social ostracism ofPeggy Eaton, during thePetticoat affair, although she continued to greet Eaton, unlike Vice PresidentJohn C. Calhoun's wife,Floride Calhoun, and most of the cabinet members' wives.[4]
In 1845, Sarah Polk became the 11th First Lady of the United States. She was lively, charming, intelligent, and a good conversationalist. President Polk at times discussed policy matters with her. While she enjoyed politics, she also cautioned her husband, whose health was never robust, against overwork.[5] A devoutPresbyterian, as First Lady she banned dancing, card games, and hard liquor at official receptions.[6] UnlikeJulia Tyler's waltzes, the Polk entertainments were sedate and sober affairs which earned the First Lady the nickname "Sahara Sarah".[7] Although some accounts stated that the Polks never served wine, a Congressman's wife "recorded in her diary details of a four-hour dinner for forty at the White House—glasses for six different wines, from pink champagne to ruby port and sauterne, 'formed a rainbow around each plate.'"[8]
After attending theinauguration ofZachary Taylor on March 4, 1849, Polk and her husband left by horse and carriage to their new home,Polk Place, inNashville, Tennessee. Upon arriving in Tennessee, to Polk's disappointment, Polk Place was not yet fully finished. They then went from Nashville toColumbia to spend two weeks with her mother-in-law before going to spend a few days in Murfreesboro with her family before returning to Nashville. Three months later, James Polk died ofcholera, having had the shortest retirement of any U.S. president. He was 53 years old.[9] Polk remained inPolk Place throughout these later years of her widowhood rarely leaving, becoming a bit of a recluse. She did not start hosting guests until a few years after her husband's death. She hosted distinguished and popular guests throughout her widowhood, such asAbram Hewitt,Edward Cooper,John C. Calhoun II,John Catron,George Bancroft, among numerous others, including PresidentsRutherford B. Hayes andGrover Cleveland.[10][11][12]
Once widowed, Polk unofficially adopted a grandniece,Sarah Polk Jetton, nicknamed "Sallie" (1847–1924), and saw her as her own daughter. After Polk's niece died, she was brought to live with Polk. They lived together in Nashville until Polk's death in 1891 at the age of 87.[13]
Polk faced small financial difficulties throughout her widowhood. Her primary form of income was coming in through a plantation she inherited from her husband. She was forced to sell the plantation before the Civil War in 1861. Later she received money through her younger brother John Childress. Starting in 1884 the United States government granted Sarah a pension of $5,000 (~$174,981 in 2024) a year until her death.[14]
During theAmerican Civil War, Polk was officially neutral, but she indicated sentiments in favor of preserving the Union during periodic visits to her home by severalUnion Army commanders, includingDon Carlos Buell,George Henry Thomas,Ulysses S. Grant, andWilliam Tecumseh Sherman. However, as a traditional Southern woman she also gave mention to Confederate sympathies during visits from Confederate generals[15] in Nashville where Sarah would spend over 42 years of her widowhood. Sarah Polk lived at Polk Place for 42 years, the longest widowhood of any US first lady, and the longest retirement untilFrances Cleveland exceeded her in 1939, andRosalynn Carter (briefly) in 2023. As a true Victorian widow, Sarah always wore black in public. She visited her brother at hisChildress-Ray House in Murfreesboro, whose daughter was married to Tennessee GovernorJohn C. Brown.[16] She also frequently visited her close friendAdelicia Acklen atBelmont.[17]
Polk died on August 14, 1891, at age 87. She was originally buried next to her husband at their home in Nashville and was later reinterred with him at theTennessee State Capitol when Polk Place was demolished in 1901.[18][19] Polk left the contents of Polk Place to her grandniece,Sarah Polk Fall.[20][21]
Contrasted with Julia Tyler's waltzes, her entertainments have become famous for sedateness and sobriety. Some later accounts say that the Polks never served wine, but in December 1845 a Congressman's wife recorded in her diary details of a four-hour dinner for forty at the White House--glasses for six different wines, from pink champagne to ruby port and sauterne, "formed a rainbow around each plate."
cooper.
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Cleveland .
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Preceded by | First Lady of the United States 1845–1849 | Succeeded by |