Atlanta, Georgia, is the New South city. No two names are more associated with its emergence than William Tecumseh Sherman and Henry W. Grady: Sherman the destroyer and Grady the New South's principal architect. Henry Grady advocated for a more urban South but had a vision for improved farm life as well. Remembered as the ""great reconciler"" between North and South, his famous ""New South"" speech echoes through the ages. William Sherman financially supported Grady's efforts in organizing the Piedmont Exposition of 1887, a step toward opening markets on a wider scale for Atlanta and Georgia. Though Grady died young at age 39 in 1889, one cannot go far in Atlanta today without coming across his name on streets and public buildings. Grady energized progressive thought about the future of the South. Hosts of journalists and writers from Joel Chandler Harris to Ralph McGill and Lilian Smith considered themselves in the Grady tradition. Grady's legacy is also segregation, and this book is filled with the horrors of that system from the Supreme Court's Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896 to Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, the latter taking the South fully fifty years to implement.
- ISBN10 088146788X
- ISBN13 9780881467888
- Publish Date 3 May 2021
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Mercer University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 277
- Language English