Polk received high praise from Confederate soldier
Sam Watkins, who wrote of him in his book
Co. Aytch: "In every battle he was engaged in, he led his men to victory, or held the enemy at bay, while the surge of battle was against us; he always seemed the successful general, who would snatch victory out of the very jaws of defeat. In every battle, Polk's brigade, of Cleburne's division, almost making the name of Cleburne as the Stonewall of the West. Polk was to Cleburne what Murat or the
Old Guard was to
Napoleon." Polk died in
Columbia, Tennessee, and is buried at St. John's Church Cemetery at nearby Ashwood. His son
Rufus King Polk was a Congressman from
Pennsylvania. ==See also==