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Henry Grady's idea for a new south was limiting the crops farmers grew.
Henry Grady envisioned the New South as a region that embraced industrialization and economic diversification, moving away from its dependence on agriculture. He believed that the South should embrace progress, attract Northern investment, and promote modernization while still maintaining social order and racial hierarchy. Grady aimed to reconcile the North and South through economic development, but his vision ultimately prioritized the interests and prosperity of white southerners.
It is first used in 1950.The term has been used with different applications in mind. The original use of the term "New South" was an attempt to describe the rise of a South after the Civil War which would no longer be dependent on now-outlawed slave labor or predominantly upon the raising of cotton, but rather a South which was also industrialized and part of a modern national economy. Henry W. Grady made this term popular in his articles and speeches as editor of the Atlanta Constitution. One way of envisioning the New South were the socialist Ruskin Colonies.[1] The historian Paul Gaston[2] coined the specific term "New South Creed" to describe the hollow promises of white elites like Grady that industrialization would bring prosperity to the region.
Henry Parkes arrived in Sydney, New South Wales, in 1839, and was elected to the NSW parliament in 1854. Thus, he was from the colony of New South Wales.
Henry Parks was born at Stonleigh Warwickshire,England in 1815. He emigrated to New South Wales in 1838 & became Premier in 1872 refer a short history of Australia by Manning Clark