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Vanleer Polk

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Occupation
  
Politician, diplomat

Name
  
Vanleer Polk


Role
  
Politician

Died
  
1907

Relatives
  
William Polk (paternal grandfather) Antoinette Polk (sister)

Parents
  
Andrew Jackson Polk, Rebecca Vanleer

Vanleer Polk (a.k.a. Van Leer Polk) (1858-1907) was an American politician and diplomat from Tennessee.

Contents

Early life

Vanleer Polk was born in 1858. His father, Andrew Jackson Polk, was the son of Colonel William Polk. His mother, Rebecca Vanleer, was an heiress to an iron fortune from Cumberland Furnace. Polk grew up at Ashwood Hall in Ashbrook, near Columbia, Tennessee.

Career

Polk was a member of the Democratic Party. He served in the Tennessee Senate in the 1890s, representing Maury County. With Flourney Rivers, a state senator for Giles County, he introduced railroad commission bills.

Polk was appointed as Consul-General in Bombay, India, by President Grover Cleveland. Later, he was appointed as one of five delegates to Brazil by President Theodore Roosevelt.

Death

He died in 1907.

References

Vanleer Polk Wikipedia