Hicks was elected to the
Nova Scotia House of Assembly in
1945 as a
Liberal for
Annapolis County and served as Nova Scotia's first minister of education from 1949 to 1954 in the government of
Angus Lewis Macdonald. When Macdonald died, Hicks ran for the Liberal party leadership against
interim leader and then
Premier Harold Connolly. The party was badly split along religious lines, with
Protestants uniting behind Hicks to defeat Connolly, who was a
Roman Catholic. As the new premier, Hicks was unable to unite the party and his government was defeated in the
1956 election by
Robert Stanfield's
Progressive Conservatives. Hicks resigned as
Leader of the opposition in 1960 and took the post of dean of arts and science at
Dalhousie University. He later became a vice president of the school and then president in 1963. He served as president until August 31, 1980 and is recognized as transforming
Dalhousie University from a tiny "College By the Sea" into a leading national
research university. During Hicks' tenure, the campus underwent a complete transformation as new facilities were built, expanded, or acquired for all areas of the university from academics and research to arts and athletics, as well as student housing. In September 2002, the Henry Hicks Academic Administration Building was named after him. In 1970, Hicks was made a Companion of the
Order of Canada. On April 27, 1972, he was appointed to the
Senate of Canada by
Pierre Trudeau, and served in that capacity until his retirement on March 5, 1990. As a keen woodworker, Hicks conducted amateur repairs on the
Black Rod of the Senate after it had snapped in half in 1967. ==Personal life and death==