Life and Legacy

View William’s myriad of professional accomplishments
at his most recent resume


William was born in Miami Florida to John and Marion Ruff. He grew up on a tropical fruit farm with his three brothers and sister. His family relocated to Ocala, Florida in the mid-1960s, where William became active in Latin Club, a hobby that would lead to his future vocation as a plant taxonomist.

In high school, William found his calling as a musician.

As a student at Ocala High School, Bill become manager and founding member of the locally famous band, the Incidentals.

After graduation, he went on to become Road Manager for the band Flow (featuring John Winter, Chuck Newcomb, Mike Barnett, Angel Allende, Johnny Pacheco, and Don Felder of the Eagles) and co-authored the song “Chicken Farm” on their debut self-titled album in 1970.

Flow and Friends at the Bredt House, Dover Plains NY
Bill pictured at far left

Over the course of his dynamic life, William had been a newspaper delivery boy, tropical fruit grower and vendor, ranch hand, lab technician for multiple sciences, disc jockey, carpenter, keyboard and guitar player, alligator handler and herpetarium assistant, portrait photographer and darkroom technician, truck driver, home builder, speech writer, grant writer and fundraiser, community college professor, Spanish language and piano tutor, tree surgeon, stamp collector, frequent lecturer, and plant systematist, among other professions. His many vocations belied his many hobbies, among which Bill was an avid motorcyclist and loved his BMW bike.

A lifelong student of the stars, William traveled to Bogota Colombia in the 1970s to capture rare solar eclipses, combining his love of telescopes and photography. He would later go on to attend NASA shuttle launches as a VIP from the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in Titusville, Florida, and led community stargazing events throughout Central Florida during the 1980s. One of his prized possessions was an autographed first edition copy of Buzz Aldrin’s Magnificent Desolation that explored the astronaut’s journeys on the Apollo mission as well as his struggles with depression and addiction.

During my early childhood, my parents took me to the South Miami Community Observatory. It was open to the public every Wednesday when skies permitted. On a Wednesday night at age 6, the evenings offerings were a viewing of Saturn in all its glory, with the rings tilted perfectly to Earth and wonderfully displayed just for my viewing pleasure. I was awed and amazing by the beauty, immensity and perfection of an infinite cosmos and its creation.

I was mesmerized and became such a fanatic that on the following Christmas I received my first telescope! I became so adept that one night returning home from a meal we all were attracted to a bright heavenly object dancing on the horizon and flashing through the sequence of the colors of the rainbow. I was so proud when Mom asked me what it was and I said “Venus!” I was even prouder when the next day the Miami Herald announced the sighting by thousands of Miamians of a “UFO” that the experts stated was only Venus.

Since then, my one and only interest has been the entire universe! Stranger still, life unfolded to allow me to become a professor of Astronomy (and Botany, Ecology, Chemistry, Earth Science, Microbiology, Biology, Zoology, Planetary Science and Physics) and practically any science I chose.

– William Ruff

Tampa Tribune 1991



For the last twenty years of his life, William served as a Peer Specialist, Peer Specialist Trainer, Connections Facilitator, and many other roles within the National Alliance of Mental Illness and Wings Across Alabama. He was a constant advocate for the support of his peers in the mental health community, especially in Birmingham and Central Alabama.



His poetic tribute to mental health patients appears engraved at the historic Bryce Hospital Memorial.

Those Who Came Before

The anguish of broken minds surrounds and overwhelms us,
But those who suffered yesterday enlighten us and open doors once sealed.
Let us now remember their sacrifice, so that we may live better lives today,
As our children will surely do tomorrow.

William R. Ruff, Bryce Hospital Memorial, August 2009


William received a grant from the Twilight Wish Foundation in 2016 to live his dream of recording his prolific catalog of original songs. His family is in the process of mixing these songs to share with loved ones.

Hold On by William Ruff (c) 2006
Red Wheels in the Sunset by William Ruff (c) 2016

William began his training as an Olympic skier in December 2018 at Smugglers’ Notch, Vermont.