Mayfield was born in
Dawn in
Deaf Smith County, southwest of
Amarillo, to William Fletcher Mayfield (died 1952) and the former Penelope Drake (died 1937). The family was involved in music,
rodeo, and
ranching. Mayfield served in the
Pacific theater of
World War II. The Mayfield Brothers were offered a recording contract, but turned it down because of the business of the family's Green Valley Ranch. In 1951, Bill Monroe's guitarist,
Carter Stanley, left the band, and Monroe, who had heard of Mayfield, offered him the vacant slot as guitarist in the Bluegrass Boys. At the time he joined the Bluegrass Boys, Edd Mayfield was described as "a handsome, tough-as-barbed-wire
cowpuncher, who literally grew up on a ranch, who could ride hard, lasso accurately, and literally toss and tie up a bull. . . and had the wiry strength of a
gymnast." In early 1958, Mayfield returned to Monroe for the last time. He contracted
leukemia, became ill while on the road with the band, and within three days of being stricken, died at a hospital in
Bluefield, West Virginia. He was 32. Services for Mayfield were held at the First
Baptist Church in Dimmitt. The burial took place at Castro County Memorial Cemetery. Mayfield was married to Jo McLain and the couple had two sons, Freddie and Carl. After Mayfield's death, his sons were raised by his brother Smokey. ==References==