Davenport  Cemetery
a single grave, on private property
Anderson County,
South Carolina Genealogy Trails

 
N34 26.537 , W82 38.877

James Ray Davenport
1985--2006
The McDougald Funeral Home

Lance Cpl. James Davenport: MARINE KILLED IN IRAQ BURIED IN ANDERSON
Bluffton Today (SC) - December 10, 2006

Dozens of people in Anderson turned out to honor a fallen Marine who lived more than 400 miles away.

Lance Cpl. James Davenport was buried Friday on property his parents owned in Anderson. They plan to move to South Carolina from Danville, Ind., once his father retires from General Motors next year.

But Anderson honored Davenport like he was a native son. Marines in dress uniform stood along the sidewalk at attention as the funeral procession left the funeral home. Workers stood outside hair salons, banks, pharmacies and retail shops, covering their hearts.

Davenport, 20, was killed Nov. 22 by a roadside bomb in Iraq's Anbar province. He followed his father and older brother into military service: Clifford Davenport served in the Navy during the Vietnam War, and J.R. is in the military police in the Army Reserve

Lance Cpl. James Davenport: City celebrates a soldier's life
Anderson Independent-Mail (SC) - December 9, 2006

Family members said Lance Cpl. James Davenport probably would have skipped his own funeral if he had seen the attention it received. He was a quiet man, like his father, who didn't like the limelight, said the Rev. Lyn Hill, pastor at Grace Baptist Church in Seneca.

Still, Anderson residents lined Main Street Friday to pay respects to their fallen hero. Lance Cpl. Davenport, 20, was a U.S. Marine stationed in Iraq. He died last month when the high-mobility multipurpose-wheeled vehicle he was driving passed a bomb on the roadway.

Marines in dress uniform stood along the sidewalk at attention as the funeral procession left McDougald Funeral Home. Workers stood outside hair salons, banks, pharmacies and retail shops, covering their hearts with their hands as if they were saying the Pledge of Allegiance.

In downtown, three men stood in the median holding large flags. At River Street, the city and county fire departments connected a flag to two ladder trucks creating an arch for the funeral procession to pass under as family and friends followed Lance Cpl. Davenport's body to its resting place on his parent's Anderson farm.

Lance Cpl. Davenport came from a military family. His father, Clifford Davenport, served in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam and his 23-year-old brother, Daniel J.R. Davenport, is in the U.S. Army Reserves.

But he enlisted in the Marines while his mother was away so people would know that joining was his decision, the Rev. Hill said.

"When he believed in something, he lived it. He acted on it," the Rev. Hill said. "He was a good man."

The soldier's quiet demeanor came from his father, but Lance Cpl. Davenport inherited his sense of humor from his mother. In the two weeks since the soldier's death, his family has recalled stories of him pulling pranks, instigating a paint war in his grandfather's house and performing surgery on a stuffed cat, the Rev. Hill said.

During the service, family members laughed when the Rev. Hill recalled how "Jimmy" loved monkeys.

Former Marines stood at attention when they heard the Marines' Hymn. Scattered throughout the chapel, members of the Marine Corps League, soldiers in fatigues and several Blue Star Mothers - women with children serving during wartime - came to honor Lance Cpl. Davenport's military service.

About 90 motorcyclists, members of the Patriot Guard Riders, surrounded the funeral home and burial service to honor him.

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