

Following World War II, LCDR. B. C. Ferguson left
active duty and began
searching
for a suitable site for an airport. He was operating several Stearmans off a
grass strip south of Greenville, Mississippi, crop dusting cotton fields. He
lived in Navy Point and wanted a place to repair and maintain the Stearmans
during the winter off-season. When he located the site on which the airport is
now located, it belonged to a man who owned a dairy farm a few miles away. It
was sandy scrub land, with very few trees, and reachable only by a dirt road.
The field started as a 1200 ft. grass strip, starting at the north edge of the
present airport. As soon as the land was cleared, a small office building was
built South of the present office facility. This was later enlarged into an open
hangar, and later further enlarged into an enclosed maintenance hangar.
When Mr. Ferguson wasn’t crop dusting in Mississippi, he was giving flying lessons
using a J-3 Cub he had purchased. At about that time, the Navy offered a large
number of SNJ’s for sale at bargain prices, and a man from Texas bought 100 of
them, flew from Bronson Field to Ferguson’s airport, and stored them around
the periphery. The photo above shows these airplanes and the original airport.
Soon thereafter, Mr. Ferguson purchased a Beech Staggerwing from the Navy, which he
used to fly to New Orleans to join his Naval Reserve squadron for weekend flying
duty. He retained the Staggerwing until sometime in the 1980’s.
In the 1950’s he added two rows of T-hangars, and extended the grass runway to
its present 1600 ft.
In the early 1960’s Mr. Ferguson became a Cessna
dealer and sometime later, he also became a dealer for Mooney.
At about the time Mr. Ferguson became a Cessna dealer, the flying business increased
to the point he took in a business partner, Mrs. Evelyn Herlikofer, and formed
Ferguson Flying Service, Inc. The grass strip was extended to 2600 ft. and
several Cessnas were purchased both for instructional use and for sale.
In 1979, hurricane Frederick did extensive damage to the office building, and
leveled one row of hangars. In 1981, an all new
facility was built at the north end of the airport to house flight training,
maintenance, parts, and pilot testing. At the same time,
the runway was paved to 3200 X 40 ft., leaving a 150 ft. grass
runway on the west side of the paved one. Additionally, there is a grass taxiway east of the airport, with access to the
runway, where several EAA members have hangars built into or alongside their
homes.
In 2004,
Hurricane IVAN
inflicted considerable damage to the airport, which lost all T-hangars and
suffered extensive to the the field itself and other buildings. Since that time,
24 new, enclosed T-hangars with electric doors have been constructed.
Ferguson airport is one of the few surviving privately owned, public use
airports remaining in this area.
Mr. Ferguson passed away on
30 December 2002.
Click here to view a tribute to Mr. Ferguson.
The Ferguson
family--son Don, his wife Dee and their daughter Jennifer--have taken over
operation of the airport.
Ferguson Flying Service
no longer exists; the current flight school and testing center is called the
Ferguson Aviation Academy. Maintenance is handled by CAM Aviation.

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