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  1. Sarah Childress Polk

    Sarah Childress Polk

    First Lady of the United States from 1845 to 1849

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  1. Sarah Childress Polk (September 4, 1803 – August 14, 1891) was the first lady of the United States from 1845 to 1849. She was the wife of the 11th president of the United States, James K. Polk. Well educated in a successful family, Sarah met her future husband at a young age.

  2. Sarah Childress Polk. Sarah Childress Polk was married to the 11th President of the United States, James Polk. She served as First Lady from 1845 to 1849. Silks and satins little Sarah took...

  3. Sarah Polk. Sarah Childress was born to Joel and Elizabeth Childress on September 4, 1803, in Tennessee. 1 Her father was a wealthy plantation owner, which led to a privileged upbringing for Sarah and her siblings.

  4. www.history.com › topics › first-ladiesSarah Polk - HISTORY

    Dec 18, 2009 · Sarah Polk (1803-1891) was an American first lady (1845–1849), wife of James K. Polk, the 11th president of the United States. Compared to most other first ladies of the 19th century, she was...

  5. Sarah Childress Polk. Sarah Childress Polk was married to the 11th President of the United States, James Polk. She served as First Lady from 1845 to 1849. Silks and satins little Sarah took for granted, growing up on a plantation near Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

  6. Sarah Polk, American first lady (184549), the wife of James K. Polk, 11th president of the United States. Compared with most other first ladies of the 19th century, she was deeply involved in her husband’s career and, through him, exerted considerable influence on public affairs and politics.

  7. Sarah Polk. Sarah Childress Polk was dignified, gracious, and held high morals. She was a helpmate to her husband and an accomplished hostess. In many ways, she was the quintessential nineteenth-century woman.

  8. Sarah Polk, a strongly religious woman, was adamant about restricting business conducted in the White House on Sundays. She disagreed with her husband’s implementation of a federal banking system. She referred to herself by the name “Mrs. James K. Polk” and restricted the use of the name Sarah Polk to legal documents only.

  9. Sarah Childress Polk. 1803-1891. [James K. Polk] Biography: Silks and satins little Sarah took for granted, growing up on a plantation near Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Elder daughter of Captain Joel and Elizabeth Childress, she gained something rarer from her father's wealth.

  10. The Polks enjoyed a congenial, fluid lifestyle made possible only because of slave labor, as Greenberg regularly reminds us. Sarah Childress’s dowry—when she left her family’s cotton farm near Murfreesboro to marry James K. Polk of Columbia—included ten enslaved people.

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