OCALA, FL (352today.com) – Long before the Ocala International Airport buzzed with private jets, charter planes and student pilots, the hum of propellers first echoed over Taylor Field – Ocala’s original municipal airport and an often-overlooked chapter in the city’s aviation history.
The history of aviation in the Ocala area began in 1927 when Rupert Caviness persuaded Jim Taylor to donate land to the City of Ocala for development of an airport. Constructed in the early 1930s, Taylor Field was named in honor of Jim Taylor, a prominent local figure, and served as Ocala’s primary aviation hub during the World War II era. The field began as a modest airstrip but quickly grew in importance when the U.S. military took it over during the war to use it as a training site for flight cadets.
In November 1941, Taylor Field was turned into a basic pilot training airfield by the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). It was then assigned to the USAAF Southeast Training Center (later Eastern Flying Training Command). It later contracted with Greenville Aviation School to conduct basic flight training.
The flight school also operated two auxiliary airfields in the local area. Over 5,000 cadets received primary flight training at the airport during World War II.
In September 1944, it was inactivated with the drawdown of the Army Air Forces Training Command’s pilot training program, was declared surplus and returned to civil control as a public airport until being replaced and closed in 1962.


Courtesy: James Huston
In the mid-1960s, Ocala shifted air operations to a new, larger site – what is now the Ocala International Airport (Ocala International-Jim Taylor Field) – effectively replacing the original Taylor Field.
Today, the original Taylor Field site is largely unrecognizable, much of it repurposed for other uses. Yet, for a generation of local aviators, it was their first takeoff point – symbolizing progress, wartime service and Ocala’s earliest efforts to join the jet age. Though long defunct, Taylor Field remains an essential waypoint in Ocala’s history of flight.