of the United States from 1861 to 1868 " (Boston, 1868) and " The Conventions of Geneva of 1864 and 1868. and St. Petersburg International Com- mission " (Leavenworth. INM;,.
POLAND. Luke Potter, jurist, b. in Westford,
Vt., 1 Nov., 1815: d. in Waterville, Vt., 2 July.
1887. He attended the common schools, was em-
ployed in a country store and on a farm, taught
at Jlorristown, Vt., studied law, and was admitted
to the bar in 1836. He was a member of the State
constitutional convention in 1843, and prosecuting
attorney for the county in 1844-'5. In 1848 he was
the Free-soil candidate for lieutenant-governor,
and in the same year he was elected a judge of the
Vermont supreme court. He was re-elected each
successive year, becoming chief justice in 1860. un-
til he was" appointed in November, 1865, on the
death of Jacob Collamer, to serve out his unexpired
term in the U. S. senate. On its conclusion he en-
tered the house of representatives, and served from
1867 till 1875. While in the senate he secured
the passage of the bankrupt law, besides originat-
ing a bill for the revision and consolidation of the
statutes of the United States. As chairman of the
committee on revision in the house, he superin-
tended the execution of his scheme of codification.
He was chairman of the committee to investigate
the outrages of the Ivi-Klux Klan, and of the in-
vestigation committee on the Credit mobilier trans-
actions ; also of one on the reconstruction of the
Arkansas state government. Several times, while
serving on the committee on elections, he came into
conflict with other Republicans on questions re-
garding the admission of Democratic members
from the M>uth. He was chairman of the Vermont
delegation to the Republican national convention
of 1876, and presented the name of William A.
Wheeler for the vice-presidency, for which office he
himself had been brought forward as a candidate.
Mr. Poland was a representative in the state legis-
lature in 1878. He was elected to congress again
in 1882, and served from 1883 till 3 March, 1885.
POLETTE, Antoine, Canadian jurist, b. in
Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec, 25 Aug., 1807 ; d. in
Three Rivers, 6 Jan., 1887. He studied law, be-
came an advocate in 1828, entered parliament in
1848, and was appointed queen's counsel in 1854.
He was made a commissioner for consolidating the
laws in 1856, and in 1860 puisne judge of the su-
preme court of Quebec, which post he held till he
retired in 1880. He was a royal commissioner in
the Canadian Pacific railway inquiry of 1873.
POLHEMUS, Abraham, clergyman, b. in As-
toria, Long Island,
N. Y., in 1812; d. in
Newburg, N. Y., in
October, 1857. His an-
cestor. Rev. Johannes
T. Polhemus. a native
of Holland, came to
this country in 1654.
Abraham was gradu-
ated at Rutgers in
1831, and at New
Brunswick theologi-
cal seminary in 1835,
and was pastor in
Hopewell. N. Y.. till
ISoT. anil in Newark.
N. J., from May of
that year till his
death. .Mr. Polhemus
was very popular in
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the community in which he lived, and was clear and logical as a pulpit orator. He published an " Address before the Alumni of Rutgers College" (1852). A " Memorial." containing twelve of his sermons, the address at his installation in Newark, by Dr. David H. Riddle, and his funeral discourse, by Dr. John Forsyth, chaplain, U. S. A., was print- ed after his death.
POLIGXAC. Camille Armand Jules Marie (po-leen-yak). Count de, soldier, b. in France, 6 Feb., 1832. He is a descendant of the Duchess of Polignac, a favorite of Marie Antoinette. At the begin-
ning of the civil war he came to this country, offered
his services to the Confederate government, and
was made brigadier-general on 10 Jan.. 1802. and
attached to the Army of Tennessee. Subsequently
he was given command of a division and commis-
sioned major-general on 13 June, 1864. During the
Franco-Prussian war of 1870-'! he served with his
countrymen, and he has since been engaged in
journalism and in civil engineering. On several
occasions he has been sent to Algiers in charge of
surveying expeditions by the French government,
and his work has received special recognition.
POLK, James Knox, eleventh president of the
United States, b. in Mecklenburg county, N. C., 2
Nov., 1795; d. in Nashville, Tenn.. 15 June, 1849.
He was a son of Samuel Polk, whose father, Eze-
kiel, was a brother of Col. Thomas (q. v.). grandson
of Robert Polk, or Pollock, who was born in Ire-
land and emigrated to the United States. His
mother was Jane, daughter of James Knox, a resi-
dent of Iredell county, N. C., and a captain in the
war of the Revolution. His father, Samuel, a
farmer, removed in the autumn of 1806 to the rich
valley of Duck river, a tributary of the Tennessee,
and made a new home in a section that was erected
the following year into the county of Maury. Be-
sides cultivating the tract of land he had pur-
chased, Samuel at intervals followed the occupa-
tion of a surveyor, acquired a fortune equal to his
wants, and lived until 1827. His son James was
brought up on the farm, and not only assisted in
its management, but frequently accompanied his
father in his surveying expeditions, during which
they were often absent for weeks. He was in-
clined to study, often busied himself with hi~ fa-
ther's mathematical calculations, and was fond of
reading. He was sent to school, and had succeeded
in mastering the English branches when ill health
compelled his removal. He was then placed with a
merchant, but having a strong dislike to commer-
cial pursuits, he obtained permission to return home
after a few weeks' trial, and in July, 1813. was given
in charge of a private tutor. In 1815 he entered
the sophomore class at the University of North
Carolina, of which institution his cousin. William
(q. v.), was a trustee. As a student young Polk was
correct, punctual, and industrious. At his gradua-
tion in 1818 he was officially acknowledged to be
the best scholar in both the classics and mathemat-
ics, and delivered the Latin salutatory. In 1847
the university conferred upon him the degree of
LL. D. In 1819 he entered the law-office of Felix
Grundy, who was then at the head of the Tennessee
bar. While pursuing his legal studies he nttraeted
the attention of Andrew Jackson, who soon after-
ward was appointed governor of the territory of
Florida. An intimaey wa^ thus begun between the
two men that in after-year* great I inlliieiieed tin-
course of at least one of them. In 1S20 Mr. Polk
was admitted to the bar, and established himself at
Columbia, tin- enmity-seat of Maury county. Here
he .-iiiained such immediate success as fails to the
lot of few, his career at the bar only ending with
his election to the governorship in 1839. At times
he practised alone, while at others he was associated