Englewood street renamed after soldier killed in terrorist attack in Kenya

The 5600 block of South Laflin Street is now named for Army Spc. Henry “Mitch” Mayfield, who was killed on Jan. 5 in an extremist attack at Manda Bay Airfield.

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A newly revealed street sign for U.S. Army Specialist Henry Mayfield Jr. on the corner of 57th and Laflin streets. in Englewood, Sunday, Oct. 18, 2020.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Less than a year after U.S. Army Spc. Henry “Mitch” Mayfield Jr. was killed in a terrorist attack at an airfield in Kenya, his old block in Englewood was officially renamed in his honor.

Dozens of Mayfield’s family members, friends and fellow servicemen weathered the cold fall temperatures and intermittent rain to catch the unveiling of a new honorary street sign on South Laflin Street from 56th to 57th streets — now ceremonially known as Spc. Henry Mayfield Jr. Way.

For Mayfield’s father, Henry Mayfield Sr., having his son’s name memorialized “is just everything.”

Army Specialist Henry Mayfield Jr. with his mother Carmoneta Horton-Mayfield. | Facebook

Army Specialist Henry Mayfield Jr. with his mother Carmoneta Horton-Mayfield. | Facebook

Provided

“Henry ran these streets right here. Crashing that big wheel, crashing that bike,” Henry Mayfield Sr. said during a news conference. “Everybody loves him. We’re all here for him.”

Mayfield, who would have turned 24 last week, was killed in a Jan. 5 assault at the Manda Bay Airfield, where about 200 U.S. troops are stationed. Al-Shabab fighters, who in Somalia have waged an insurgency against a U.S.-backed government, took credit for the attack.

Just five days after he was killed, Mayfield’s cousin Milka Overton approached Ald. Stephanie Coleman (16th) as she petitioned to rename the small patch of Englewood.

“I was a mess,” Overton said, fighting back tears as she recalled that initial meeting. “She didn’t shut her door on me. She listened to me.”

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Milka Overton speaks about the effort and meaning behind the new street sign during an honorary street naming ceremony for U.S. Army Specialist Henry Mayfield Jr.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Coleman, who was elected last year, said she was immediately touched by Mayfield’s story, noting that he “gave his life in the most honorable way.” Before to displaying the new signage, Coleman told the crowd her 16th Ward hasn’t renamed a street in “over five years.”

Mayfield childhood home now sits vacant after he and his family relocated to Crestwood when he was in high school. Sunday’s ceremony was attended by a handful of officials from that south suburban village, which has also renamed a street in Mayfield’s honor.

Hazel Crest Mayor Vernard Alsberry, a veteran of the U.S. Air Force, told Coleman’s family the young serviceman “gave the ultimate sacrifice for our country and for our community.”

“Your son’s a hero,” Alsberry said. “It’s always a pleasure to honor a hero.”

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Ald. Stephanie Coleman (16th), Hazel Crest Mayor Vernard Alsberry Jr. and Henry Mayfield Sr. join a group posing with the honorary street sign on Sunday, Oct. 18, 2020.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

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