Notable Fire-eaters (secessionists) of the Antebellum and American Civil War - Statistics

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Answer Stats
Hint Answer % Correct
Secretary of War to James Monroe, Vice President under John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, he became a pro-slavery supporter and died 11 years before the war broke out John C. Calhoun
91%
An outspoken secessionist, he committed suicide only a couple months after the surrender at Appomattox Edmund Ruffin
23%
Published "De Bow's Review" in the Antebellum Years and worked for the Confederate Treasury during the war James De Bow
17%
Owner of the Charleston Mercury, he served in the House of Representatives and the Senate, and is credited by some as the "Father of Secession" Robert Barnwell Rhett
14%
Instrumental in helping Alabama secede from the Union; he also later served as a diplomat for the Confederate States William Lowndes Yancey
11%
After playing a role in helping South Carolina secede from the Union, he served in the Confederate Army and was killed at the Battle of Cold Harbor Lawrence Keitt
6%
Wrote "An Inquiry into the Law of Negro Slavery" Thomas R. R. Cobb
4%
Serving in the House of Representatives before the war, he argued to the other representatives to let South Carolina go in peace or else war would come. After the war he became president of the University of South Carolina William Porcher Miles
4%
Fled to England after the war ended, but returned and outspokenly defended the Confederacy right until his death in 1881 John S. Preston
3%
Personally encouraged the shelling of Fort Sumter, and later fled to England for a few years after the war ended Louis T. Wigfall
1%
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