John Andrew Mayfield, 18651905 (aged 40 years)

Name
John Andrew /Mayfield/
Given names
John Andrew
Surname
Mayfield
Birth
Occupation
train engineer
Employer: Texas Central Railroad
17th President of the United States
Andrew Johnson
April 15, 1865
Marriage of a parent
18th President of the United States
Ulysses S Grant
March 4, 1869
Marriage
British Queen
Victoria
from June 20, 1837 to January 22, 1901
19th President of the United States
Rutherford B Hayes
March 4, 1877
20th President of the United States
James A Garfield
March 4, 1881
21st President of the United States
Chester A Arthur
September 19, 1881
22nd President of the United States
Grover Cleveland
March 4, 1885
Birth of a daughter
23rd President of the United States
Benjamin Harrison
March 4, 1889
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
24th President of the United States
Grover Cleveland
March 4, 1893
Birth of a daughter
Citation details: Certificate# 43874
Birth of a daughter
Citation details: Certificate# 63839
25th President of the United States
William McKinley
March 4, 1897
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a daughter
British King
Edward VII
from January 22, 1901 to May 6, 1910
26th President of the United States
Theodore Roosevelt
September 14, 1901
Birth of a son
Birth of a daughter
Death of a father
Death
Citation details: page 503
Text:

John Andrew Mayfield was born in 1865 in Hunt County, Texas, and later moved with his parents to Bosque County. In 1885, upon reaching maturity, John married Alicia Anna Wilks, the daughter of Benjamin Carrol and Martha Harriet (Young) Wilks of Chalk Mountain, Texas. The couple lived in Walnut Springs where their nine children - eight girls and one boy - were born. John Mayfield was an engineer for the Texas Central Railroad. He was a loving husband, father, son, and brother.
He was, indeed, a friend to all who knew him. On September 26, 1905, John Mayfield was killed in a train wreck near Morgan. An account of this tragic accident follows.
In Memory of John Mayfield
26 September, 1905
One of the most disastrous wrecks that ever happened on the Texas Central Railroad occurred last Tuesday evening at 3:20 o'clock, three miles east of Morgan in which engineer John Mayfield lost his life and fireman Jack Arnold and Brakeman Byron Wright were injured. This was a work train operating between Morgan and Fowler, and was coming to Morgan when the accident occurred. The train was backing up, the tender first leaving the track; the engine and five cars were derailed, smashing everything in their wake. The engine and tank were ten feet outside the railroad right of way.
The first report reaching Walnut Springs was that Engineer Mayfield was killed and the fireman badly injured. A relief train was immediately made up and left at once, with a physician, for the scene of the disaster. A later report came to the effect that Engineer Mayfield was not dead, but was not expected to live, and that Jack Arnold, the fireman, was badly scalded and Brakeman Wright had a limb smashed by a car running over it. Mr. Mayfield was found pinned between the engine and tank with one limb mashed and was scalded and horribly burned by escaping steam. The wounded were brought to Walnut Springs and given medical attention. Mr. Mayfield died 9 o'clock Tuesday night, with his grief stricken family and friends near him. After the funeral services at the residence, the body was carried to the local cemetery the day after the tragedy, and was buried by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fireman of which order he was a highly respected member. After being placed upon his bed, he had faintly said: "I have made my last run.
Realizing as he did that the sand of his hour glass was rapidly running out, John Mayfield manifested that degree of coolness and calmness that had so beautifully characterized his life. He was unshaken in his expiring moments and his chief concern was more for his family than anything else.

by K. G. Wilks1 [Karl Glyn Wilks, nephew of Alicie Anna Wilks and John Andrew Mayfield]

Family with parents
father
1846
Birth: December 20, 1846
Death:
himself
18651905
Birth: 1865 18 Hunt, Texas, USA
Death: September 26, 1905Morgan, Bosque, Texas, USA
Father’s family with Emily McGee Miller
father
1846
Birth: December 20, 1846
Death:
stepmother
Marriage MarriageMay 20, 1865
Family with Alicie Anna Wilks
himself
18651905
Birth: 1865 18 Hunt, Texas, USA
Death: September 26, 1905Morgan, Bosque, Texas, USA
wife
18661924
Birth: April 20, 1866 38 24 Peoria, Hill, Texas, USA
Death: March 26, 1924
Marriage Marriage1885Walnut Springs, Bosque, Texas, USA
17 months
daughter
18861948
Birth: June 6, 1886 21 20
Death: April 28, 1948
3 years
daughter
18891948
Birth: June 6, 1889 24 23
Death: August 6, 1948
2 years
daughter
18911948
Birth: June 15, 1891 26 25 Walnut Springs, Bosque, Texas, USA
Death: March 28, 1948Denton, Denton, Texas, USA
2 years
daughter
Ernest E. Gillespie & Juanita Mayfield Gillespie Tombstone
18931970
Birth: September 2, 1893 28 27 Walnut Springs, Bosque, Texas, USA
Death: June 19, 1970Waco, McLennan, Texas, USA
3 years
daughter
18961962
Birth: February 28, 1896 31 29 Walnut Springs, Bosque, Texas, USA
Death: September 30, 1962Waco, McLennan, Texas, USA
22 months
daughter
18971960
Birth: December 6, 1897 32 31
Death: March 13, 1960
3 years
daughter
19001977
Birth: August 1900 35 34
Death: 1977
4 years
son
19041946
Birth: September 1904 39 38
Death: May 30, 1946
13 months
daughter
19051978
Birth: September 20, 1905 40 39 Texas, USA
Death: November 1978Beaumont, Jefferson, Texas, USA
Birth
Marriage
Occupation
Death
Citation details: page 503
Text:

John Andrew Mayfield was born in 1865 in Hunt County, Texas, and later moved with his parents to Bosque County. In 1885, upon reaching maturity, John married Alicia Anna Wilks, the daughter of Benjamin Carrol and Martha Harriet (Young) Wilks of Chalk Mountain, Texas. The couple lived in Walnut Springs where their nine children - eight girls and one boy - were born. John Mayfield was an engineer for the Texas Central Railroad. He was a loving husband, father, son, and brother.
He was, indeed, a friend to all who knew him. On September 26, 1905, John Mayfield was killed in a train wreck near Morgan. An account of this tragic accident follows.
In Memory of John Mayfield
26 September, 1905
One of the most disastrous wrecks that ever happened on the Texas Central Railroad occurred last Tuesday evening at 3:20 o'clock, three miles east of Morgan in which engineer John Mayfield lost his life and fireman Jack Arnold and Brakeman Byron Wright were injured. This was a work train operating between Morgan and Fowler, and was coming to Morgan when the accident occurred. The train was backing up, the tender first leaving the track; the engine and five cars were derailed, smashing everything in their wake. The engine and tank were ten feet outside the railroad right of way.
The first report reaching Walnut Springs was that Engineer Mayfield was killed and the fireman badly injured. A relief train was immediately made up and left at once, with a physician, for the scene of the disaster. A later report came to the effect that Engineer Mayfield was not dead, but was not expected to live, and that Jack Arnold, the fireman, was badly scalded and Brakeman Wright had a limb smashed by a car running over it. Mr. Mayfield was found pinned between the engine and tank with one limb mashed and was scalded and horribly burned by escaping steam. The wounded were brought to Walnut Springs and given medical attention. Mr. Mayfield died 9 o'clock Tuesday night, with his grief stricken family and friends near him. After the funeral services at the residence, the body was carried to the local cemetery the day after the tragedy, and was buried by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fireman of which order he was a highly respected member. After being placed upon his bed, he had faintly said: "I have made my last run.
Realizing as he did that the sand of his hour glass was rapidly running out, John Mayfield manifested that degree of coolness and calmness that had so beautifully characterized his life. He was unshaken in his expiring moments and his chief concern was more for his family than anything else.

by K. G. Wilks1 [Karl Glyn Wilks, nephew of Alicie Anna Wilks and John Andrew Mayfield]

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