Benjamin Mayfield, the second son of
American pioneer farmer
William Mayfield and his first wife, was born in
Illinois in about 1831. His father moved the family to
Texas in 1837, where he and his older brother John grew up in
Washington County and his brother
Thomas Jefferson Mayfield was born in 1843. There his other died sometime before his father was married to his second wife Mary Ann Curd on March 16, 1848. When Benjamin was 18, in 1849 his father moved the family again to California, with a U. S. Army wagon train but were sent back to avoid the danger to civilians from the
Lipan Apache on the trail and they then took a six-month trip by ship from
Galveston around
Cape Horn to reach California. After they landed at San Francisco, William took his family to the southern end of the San Joaquin Valley, then
Mariposa County, now
Tulare County to a place at the confluence of
Sycamore Creek with the
Kings River, (about 1.5 miles above modern
Trimmer, California). There Ben and his older brother John helped his father build a cabin, put in crops and began mining. Mary Mayfield died in December 1850, and in 1851, William Mayfield left eight-year-old Thomas to be raised by the
Choinumni, the friendly
Yokuts tribe living across the river from his cabin, while he and his two older sons left to engage in mining and raising cattle for the next 10 years. William Mayfield died on April 9, 1862, leading
Tulare County militia in the
Battle of Mayfield Canyon early in the
Owens Valley Indian War. After his death Benjamin went to
Southern California and became a miner in the
Lytle Creek mines. ==Killing of John Mason and the Trials of Benjamin Mayfield==