In 1921, the land area known as the Barking Sands was acquired by the
Kekaha Sugar Company and became a runway for private planes. In 1928
Charles Kingsford Smith, a record-setting Australian aviator, took off with his four-man crew from a sandy runway here to fly non-stop to Fiji. They had arrived in Hawaii at
Wheeler Army Airfield, but left from Barking Sands as Wheeler was not long enough to take off with their heavy load. The
U.S. Army acquired the land in 1940, named it
Mana Airport, and paved the runway. Additional land acquired in 1941 expanded the facility to . Private airlines frequently utilized the airport, and
World War II incurred a great deal of military flight operations. The base was officially designated
Bonham Air Force Base in 1954. U.S. Navy operations at Bonham began in 1956, with testing of the
Regulus I missile. In 1958, the Pacific Missile Range Facility was established to support the growing demand of the Navy at Bonham. In 1964, the Pacific Missile Range Facility and Bonham was transferred to the Navy, becoming Pacific Missile Range Facility, Barking Sands. ==Missile tests==