In 1856 Hicks was appointed assistant obstetric physician at
Guy's Hospital and full physician in 1868. In 1888 he became obstetric physician at
St Mary's Hospital, London. Hicks was the first physician to describe the bipolar and other methods of the
version of a
fetus. In 1872, he described the
uterine contractions not resulting in
childbirth now known as
Braxton Hicks contractions. In 1862 he was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society by virtue of his interest in Natural History, about which he wrote numerous papers. He gave the Hunterian Oration to the
Hunterian Society in 1868 and was elected their president for 1879. ==Personal life==