arkansas in the 1840s, 1830s and 1840s, so he had been in murray county, tennessee, he moved to hardiman county tennessee, but by 1840 he's in phillips county arkansas. i'm pulling some of this straight from the polk correspondence. according to those notes, okay, he lends this $9,000 to james k. polk, and nthen he kind of not o subtly hints around that he would like an appointment for thomas polk in like missouri or somewhere. this is where i get a little hung up. his son is named thomas. there's a bunch of other thomas pol polks. the point is that's the network james k. polk is plugged into. i'm kind of giving the epilogue of one of the presentations we heard this morning about the expansion of land holdings and consolidation of power by the polk family in earlier years. he died in october 1848, buried in phillips county, arkansas. that plantation is inherited, you know, by his children, and they, at least one of them sticks around and continued to do very well, okay. if you follow that particular holding through the census, it looks like it shrinks as far as the number of enslaved peo