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  1. Edmund Ruffin III (January 5, 1794 – June 17, 1865) was a wealthy Virginia planter, amateur soil scientist, and political activist best known as an early advocate for secession of the southern slave states from the United States.

  2. Long mistakenly credited as the man who fired the first shot of the Civil War (that honor goes to Lt. Henry S. Farley), Edmund Ruffin III began his career as an agricultural scientist, not a Southern firebrand. Ruffin was born on January 5, 1794, in Prince William County, Virginia.

  3. Edmund Ruffin III (January 5, 1794 – June 17, 1865) was a wealthy Virginia planter who served in the Virginia Senate from 1823 to 1827. In the last three decades before the American Civil War, his pro-slavery writings received more attention than his agricultural work.

  4. Aug 26, 2020 · Edmund Ruffin, 71 years old, resolved to die by his own hand, unwilling to live in a world without the Southern Confederacy. “Methodically and carefully,” Walther explains, “Ruffin prepared for his death.

    • Neil Kumar
  5. Dec 22, 2021 · Edmund Ruffin was a prominent Southern nationalist, noted agriculturalist, writer and essayist, and Virginia state senator (1823–1827). After dropping out of college and serving briefly in the Virginia militia during the War of 1812, Ruffin began a long career farming along the James River and studying the soil.

  6. Jan 29, 2019 · Mad Scientist: Virginian Edmund Ruffin pioneered the use of soil regeneration through the use of marl, or calcium-rich fertilizer. His passion for the South turned to anger when his dreams for a separate nation began to unravel.

  7. A native of Prince George County, Virginia, Edmund Ruffin (1794–1865) was celebrated among fellow secessionists as one of the chief proponents for Southern nationalism. In 1811, he married Susan Travis, who bore him eleven children before dying in 1846.

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