James J. Mayfield
James Jefferson Mayfield Jr. was an American judge. He servered as a justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama from 1954 until his death in 1956.
Early life, education and military service
Born on November 10, 1911, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Mayfield's father, J. J. Mayfield, was an Alabama legal scholar who also served on the state supreme court. Mayfield received a B.A. from the University of Alabama in 1932, and a law degree from the same institution in 1934, after which he became a United States conciliation commissioner that same year, and an assistant attorney general in 1935. In 1936, he chaired the Board of Registrars. During World War II, Mayfield joined the Army Air Forces and graduated from of the Judge Advocate School at the University of Michigan, thereafter deploying to "a combat bombardment group in the Southwest Pacific".Legal and judicial career
After the war, Mayfield "returned to Tuscaloosa to practice law and built a reputation as an experienced and able lawyer", also lecturing at the University of Alabama School of Law from 1946 to 1953.In November 1954, Mayfield was elected to a seat on the state supreme court to succeed interim appointee Preston C. Clayton in the seat vacated by the death of Justice Joel B. Brown. Mayfield took office on November 12, 1954, and served until his death by suicide on April 4, 1956. A week before his death, Mayfield had made a speech in support of racial segregation in the United States, declaring that he would not "stand by and see the Supreme Court abolish our Southern way of life".