Virginia Mayfield

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Virginia Henry Mayfield (born November 14, 1889 in Birmingham; died February 4, 1944 in Washington D.C.) was an educator, attorney, judge, state land agent, and federal official.

Mayfield was one of nine children born to Manoah, and the fourth of five born to his first wife, Mary Helen Baker Henry, who died in 1891. She grew up in Birmingham and attended public schools. She began working as a teacher in Decatur, Morgan County and later returned to Birmingham, where she taught for five years at the Baker School and another at Martin School. In the summers, she continued her own education at the University of Chicago and at the State College of Cedar Falls, Iowa.

On August 26, 1914 Henry married Cephus Mayfield, then an assistant traffic manager for the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company. They resided in a a two-story Craftsman style house at 3221 Cliff Road in Birmingham's Highland Park neighborhood. The couple was childless, and Cephus died in 1933.

Mayfield completed a degree in law at Birmingham-Southern College in 1920. She and Floella Bonner shared the distinction of being the first women to earn law degrees in Alabama. and was admitted to the Alabama State Bar in 1922. She took a job with the legal staff of the Jefferson County Treasurer. In 1923, with the support of the Women's Democratic Club, Governor William Brandon appointed her judge of the Jefferson County Circuit's first Court of Domestic Relations.

In 1927 Mayfield ran for a Circuit Court seat, but was defeated by incumbent Roger Snyder. Afterward she began working as an assistant to the State Land Agent in Jefferson County. She then took a job with the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington D.C. She was transferred to the department's Birmingham office. When it closed, she returned to Washington as a staff attorney for the Federal Communications Commission, and then for the U.S. Veterans Administration.

Mayfield was admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1935. In the late 1930s she joined the Southern Conference for Human Welfare. She was also a member of Highlands Methodist Church, and a worthy matron of Myrtle Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star.

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