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Polk: Forgotten Great
Townhall.com ^ | November 13, 2009 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 11/13/2009 6:04:17 AM PST by Kaslin

As America debates whether to send tens of thousands more troops to Afghanistan, in the ninth year of a war for ends we cannot discern, a riveting new history recalls times when Americans fought for vital national interests.

"A Country of Vast Designs: James K. Polk, the Mexican War, and the Conquest of the American Continent" is Robert Merry's brilliant biography and history of that time. Merry goes far toward righting the injustice done by historians who have denied this great man his place in the pantheon of presidents, because they believe "Jimmy Polk's War" to have been a war of aggression against a Third World people.

As Merry relates, the problem is not with "Young Hickory," the protege of Andrew Jackson, but with historians who ever allow political correctness to blind them to true greatness.

The Mexican War was as just a war as we have ever fought.

In 1836 at San Jacinto, Sam Houston had won the independence of Texas with his defeat of Santa Anna, butcher of the Alamo and Goliad. In eight years, Mexico had not tried to recapture Texas. For eight years, Houston and Texas had sought admission to the Union.

In 1844, Polk, twice defeated for governor of Tennessee, was seeking the Democratic vice presidential nomination on a ticket with ex-President Martin Van Buren, Jackson's vice president.

But when the issue of annexation of Texas caught fire in the country, Van Buren opposed it, losing his patron Jackson. Polk rode the Texas issue to victory in Baltimore as the "dark horse" in the most dramatic convention in history. His opponent that November, the Whig Henry Clay, running a third time, was also fatally wrong on Texas.

Lame-duck president John Tyler, however, stole a march on Polk by annexing Texas by joint resolution of Congress.

But where was the southern border of Texas?

Santa Anna had signed Texas away to the Rio Grande. Mexico said the border was the Nueces River, far to the north. In dispute were thousands of square miles. To enforce America's claim, Polk sent Gen. Zachary Taylor to the Rio Grande.

A Mexican army arrived on the south bank, and an American patrol, north of the Rio Grande, was ambushed and cut to pieces by Mexican troops. When word reached Washington, Polk sent Congress a message: "The cup of forbearance" has "been exhausted."

Congress voted a near-unanimous declaration of war.

And as ever in wartime, bold men rise to immortality.

Col. Stephen Kearny set out from Kansas with 1,500 troops, marched to Santa Fe, claimed New Mexico for the Union and, with 300 dragoons, rode on to Los Angeles, into a clash with Capt. John C. Fremont, son-in-law of Polk's mighty Senate ally, Thomas Hart Benton.

Zachary Taylor, "Old Rough and Ready," routed Santa Anna at Buena Vista in a victory that would make this Whig general Polk's successor as president. Bayoneted to death at Buena Vista had been the young hero Henry Clay Jr. His father had bitterly opposed the war.

To Gen. Winfield Scott, Polk gave command of an army that was to land at Veracruz and take the path of Cortez to the capital to dictate terms if Mexican diehards rejected a negotiated peace.

Leading an invasion force half the size of the defending army, Scott never lost a battle on his six-month march to Mexico City. The Duke of Wellington called Scott the world's "greatest living soldier" and said his campaign "was unsurpassed in military annals."

Riding with Scott's army was Polk's agent, Nicholas Trist, who would bring home a triumph rivaled only by the Louisiana Purchase. Trist was the chief clerk of the State Department under that devious secretary of state and future president James Buchanan, who ever had his eyes on the prize.

Given specific instructions by Polk on what he could offer Mexico, the cantankerous Trist ran afoul first of Scott, then of Polk, who ordered him recalled.

But Trist rode on to Mexico City, reconciled with Scott, seized the opportunity of a peace party in power, negotiated the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, came home and was sacked.

But under Trist's treaty, Mexico had agreed to the Rio Grande as the Texas border, ceded all of New Mexico, which included half a dozen future American states, and signed away California, for $15 million and forgiveness of Mexico's debts.

The renegade envoy had come home with half of Mexico. They ought to rename the State Department for this great American.

Some urged Polk to break his pledge and run again. He refused. He had done what he came to do: annex all of Texas, acquire California and settle the Oregon Territory dispute with Great Britain on terms favorable to the United States.

Polk went home to Tennessee and, in 100 days, was dead.

He lacked the character of Washington, the brilliance of Jefferson, the charisma of Jackson, but James K. Polk belongs with the immortals. None gave more or did more for America. Bob Merry has made a major contribution to historical truth and written one splendid book.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Mexico; US: New Mexico; US: North Carolina; US: Tennessee; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: americanhistory; mexico; newmexico; northcarolina; pages; patbuchanan; pitchforkpat; polk; presidents; robertmerry; tennessee; texas
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To: Pistolshot

Thank you for the suggestions and I will certainly do that. It’s interesting this subject is coming up because I recently finished up reading Glenn Beck’s Arguing with Idiots and in the Presidents chapter, he had Polk rated very high as President and didn’t know why, so I did end up doing a little research and enjoyed what I found.

When I got older, I realized that Polk had much more significance to our history but still couldn’t tell you anything about him. I have to say, as a subject of the public school system, we learned very little (if anything) about him. In fact, if you asked many people my age who dealt with the same education, many wouldn’t even be able to tell you he was once a President.


21 posted on 11/13/2009 9:45:55 AM PST by JenB987
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To: wardaddy

It’s despicable what was allowed to happen to his downtown Nashville mansion “Polk Place.” He wanted it preserved for perpetuity, had himself interred on the grounds (along with Sarah). Squabbling relatives after her death disregarded his explicit instructions, sold off the property in sections, demolished the President’s mansion (virtually unprecedented in American history) (where an apartment building, called Polk Flats was constructed, now the site of a seedy motel across from the old library), and had Polk & wife DUG UP and reburied on the forlorn northeast side of the State Capitol grounds. Not what Polk wanted at all.

I’ve said many times the state should reacquire those properties, demolish most of what currently stands, reconstruct his old mansion, and put him and Mrs. Polk back where they’re supposed to be.


22 posted on 11/13/2009 6:42:16 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

i had forgotten about all that dj..nice snag


23 posted on 11/13/2009 9:27:35 PM PST by wardaddy (The movie Valkyrie was excellent...I was surprised. What a cast.)
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To: wardaddy

Here's the mansion. You'll recognize the burial tomb in front, that's what was moved.

24 posted on 11/13/2009 9:37:07 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: Pistolshot

Thank you for the photograph. It reminds me of how young our country really is.


25 posted on 11/13/2009 9:38:13 PM PST by thecodont
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To: wardaddy

http://nashvillehistoricalnewsletter.googlepages.com/hownashvilledishonoredapresidentandalter

Here’s another article, which could’ve been written by me (but wasn’t).


26 posted on 11/13/2009 9:52:24 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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