In contrast to the volumes written about presidential greats like George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, only a handful of books focus on James K. Polk, leaving many history readers to think his 1845–1849 presidency was ineffective. Yet in “Polk: The Man Who Transformed the Presidency and America,” historian and author Walter R. Borneman shows us just how tenacious and accomplished the leader was.
Borneman taps two main primary sources for his research: Polk’s personal diary, which he began keeping during the first year of his presidency, and his extensive published correspondence.
Sixteen pages of maps, three full pages of key dates, 13 pages of drawings and an early daguerreotype add to the rich text that tells the story of Polk’s life, from his birth in a simple log cabin in rural Pineville, North Carolina, to his family’s move to Tennessee.
A Successful Term
History, however, often paints Polk as a “dark horse” president—coming out of nowhere—and because he prematurely announced he was only running for one-term, people assumed he would be a “lame-duck” president. Borneman counters that assumption in his introduction: “If he was indeed [a dark horse], he chose to ride boldly across a bright land and in doing so opened up the American West to half a century of unbridled expansion.”
After showing us “The Man,” primarily Polk’s upbringing, character, and aspirations in Part I of the book, Borneman commits the first section of Part II to how some of the West was won. One of the most significant achievements during Polk’s administration was the admission of Texas to the Union in December 1845.
Also, during Polk’s administration, Iowa and Wisconsin were added to the Union and bills were signed to establish Oregon and Minnesota as territories. Plus, just before his presidency ended, Polk signed the bill creating the Department of the Interior.
On the Author
In the book’s acknowledgements, Borneman credits his grandfather for instilling in him as a young boy a passion for history, especially knowledge of American presidents. “By my third-grade year, my grandfather was tutoring me in the presidents of the United States. … Patiently, Grandpa repeated the names and had me recite them in a particular cadence.”While Borneman has written a few American history books, including “1812: The War That Forged a Nation” and “American Spring: Lexington, Concord, and the Road to Revolution,” the Polk biography is his on focus on a president.
One of the author’s goals in providing a thorough view of Polk is to convey to readers that all men who have held the highest U.S. office are worthy of our attention. While the buildup to the Civil War may have shrouded Polk’s service to the country, “Polk: The Man Who Transformed the Presidency and America” offers “key reasons that James K. Polk deserves recognition as a significant and influential American president.”
To learn those reasons, consider adding Borneman’s book to your list of must-reads.







