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was foreman on the Corn Ranch.  M. N. Wallace purchased the "old Benbrook Home" property along
               Old Benbrook Road in 1921 and built two rock houses.  The M. N. Wallace house at 8216 Old

               Benbrook Road was built in 1921.  The Frank E. Wallace house is located at 8812 Old Benbrook Road
               and constructed in 1923.  Frank E. Wallace was co-owner with M.N. Wallace of Benbrook's general
               store from 1936 until it was sold in 1941.  F. E. Wallace also ran the post office with M. N. Wallace
               serving as mail carrier.  The N. E. Wallace house at 8216 Old Benbrook Road was torn down in 1986.

               The  American  Legion  Paul  Mansir  Post  297  nearby  at  8201  Old  Benbrook  Road  originally  was
               constructed in 1933 as the Benbrook Church of Christ.  The Methodist Church built a new building
               from 1929 to 1931, in Greek Revival style, with funding from members and from rancher Cass

               Edwards.

               Mr. Edwards believed that the Building Committee's original plans were too small.  The building had
               a sanctuary upstairs, classrooms in the basement, and its own electric light plant.  Bishop H. A. Boaz
               officiated at the opening with the Reverend Floyd Thrash serving as pastor.  The building was later
               used by the Benbrook Pentecostal Baptist Church when the Methodists moved to a new location on
               Bryant Street in 1957.  The Baptists and two other congregations met in a building erected on a one-
               acre plot donated by Z Boaz.


               WORLD WAR I

               Early during the first world war, General John J. "Blackjack" Pershing invited the Royal Canadian
               Flying Corps to establish training fields in Texas because of the mild weather.  After looking at sites
               in Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco, Austin, Wichita Falls, and Midland, three sites were established in the
               Fort Worth vicinity - these sites in North Fort Worth, Everman, and Benbrook became known as the
               "Flying Triangle."  The Royal Flying Corps used the fields from October 1917 to April 1918; the fields

               were then turned over to the U. S. Army.  Taliafero Field Number 3 (later renamed Carruthers Field
               after Cadet W. K. Carruthers who was killed on June 18, 1917) was located south of Mercedes Street

               in what is now the Benbrook Lakeside subdivision.  When the U. S. entered the war, the field was
               renamed Benbrook Field and served to train American pilots.


               The most famous casualty at Benbrook Field was Vernon W. Blyth Castle, part of the famous Vernon
               and Irene Castle dance team; the duo was best known for introducing the tango to the United States
               in 1913.  Captain Castle, recipient of the French Croix de Guerre for his combat missions over
               Germany and Commander of the 84th Canadian Training Squad, was killed on February 15, 1918.
               Captain Castle's plane crashed while avoiding another airplane that was landing.  Captain Castle's
               pet monkey and his student both survived the crash; the student's survival is attributed to the fact
               that he sat in the seat normally occupied by the instructor.  The funeral for Castle was one of the
               largest held in Fort Worth and drew international attention.  Castle's body was transported to New
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