Taliafero Field No. 1 was used by the Royal Flying Corps from October 1917 to April 1918 as a training field for American and Canadian pilots. It was then turned over to the Air Service, United States Army. The Americans renamed the fieldHicks Field, after Charles Hicks, who owned the Hicks Ranch on which the airfield was built.
World War I
The first trainees arrived in November 1917 to a very crude facility. Most structures were unfinished and personnel lived and worked in canvas tents. The Flu Epidemic killed many assigned personnel. The airfield was taken over by United States Army in April 1918. The Curtiss JN-4 "Jenny" became the primary aircraft used for flight training after the Army takeover. Training units assigned to Hicks Field were:
Flying School Detachment, November 1918 – November 1919
The 22d, 27th, 28th, 139th, 147th, and 148th US Aero Squadrons trained at the facility. Military use ended in early 1919 after the end of World War I. In 1923, the field became the location of the world's first helium plant, operated by United States Navy. It became a Navy blimp facility until 1929 when shortages closed facility.
In preparation for the eventual U.S. entry into World War II, the United States Army Air Corps sought to expand the nation's combat air forces by asking civilian flight schools to provide the primary phase of training for air cadets. Consequently, it contracted with civilian flying schools to provide primary flying training, with the graduates being moved on to basic and advanced training at regular military training airfields. Taken over by United States Army Air Corps in 1940, Hicks Field was reopened and its facilities improved. It was used as a contract primary flight training facility by the USAAF Gulf Coast Training Center. The Texas Aviation School and the W. F. Long Flying School provided flying training to aviation cadets. Initially under supervision of 307th Army Air ForcesFlying Training Detachment, later re-designated as 2555th Army Air Forces Base Unit on 1 May 1944. A ten-week course of primary training continued at Hicks, and a total of 2,403 cadets were processed, and about 70% made it to the next level of training at Randolph Field. Flying training was performed with Fairchild PT-19s as the primary trainer. Also had several PT-17 Stearmans and a few P-40 Warhawks were assigned. The field was inactivated 20 July 1944 with the drawdown of AAFTC's pilot training program, declared surplus, and turned over to the Army Corps of Engineers. It was eventually discharged to the War Assets Administration and returned to civil control.
Civil use
Hicks Field was converted to a civil airport by April 1945. Postwar use included storage and sale of surplus military aircraft. In 1954, Hicks was used by Bell Helicopter for flight testing of the HSLanti-submarine warfare helicopter. During the 1950s, two Bell Helicopter pilots found a recessed actual-sized World War I biplane silhouette west of the old Hicks Field location. Locals say it was used for practice bombing & for some strafing practice. Over the years the local farmers fenced in the site, hoping to protect it in some way. The site is on the West side of the creek and just on the opposite side from a new gas-well-head site on the creek. Hicks fell into disuse by 1976, having been removed from maps, and with only a few businesses remaining. In 1985, the similarly named but unrelated Hicks Airfield opened a short distance away. The original airfield was redeveloped into an industrial park by the early 1990s, although a few World War II-era hangars still stood. Today, the site of Hicks Field is an industrial complex, and very little remains of its aviation past. Hicks Field Road crosses the property, its name reflecting the former airfield. The northern part of the airfield is dotted with natural gas wells, the southern part being a steel recycling yard. The station area part of Hicks Field is totally obliterated with open storage yards, new buildings and other structures; the railroad spur running through the airfield remaining and is still in use for freight traffic through the industrial area. Some World War II aircraft hangars remain, apparently in use as warehouses, all of which are in a deteriorated state. None of the World War I nor World War II buildings remain, although some concrete pads in the area may be some foundations of them. There is a new housing addition a half mile northwest from the site and the entrance to the housing is from Bonds Ranch Road. The road to the location is not for public access.