Lee Davenport

Lee Davenport

Lee Davenport Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Oct. 4, 2011.
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Lee Davenport, a physicist who developed a radar device that helped U.S. and allied troops win key battles in World War II, has died. He was 95.

He died Friday of cancer in Greenwich, his daughter, Carol Davenport, said Tuesday.

Davenport was among hundreds of scientists who worked at the secret Massachusetts Institute of Technology Radiation Laboratory, even before America joined the war in 1941, to develop radar systems that would give the U.S. military an edge. He was credited with developing the SCR-584 — the letters standing for Signal Corps Radio — a microwave radar built into a semitrailer with a parabola on top that tracked enemy planes and helped to direct anti-aircraft batteries.

The radar helped to counter the German air force and aided troops who shot down planes during German air attacks on Italy's Anzio beachhead in 1944.

Davenport went to England to waterproof radar semitrailers that were to be floated ashore at Normandy in the D-Day invasion on June 6, 1944. After the landing, he was sent to France to continue developing applications for the radar.

"They issued papers for me to be known as a captain in the Signal Corps," Davenport said in a 2010 interview with the Greenwich Citizen, a weekly newspaper. "I had all the dog tags and identification. When you are a civilian and are overseas in a war zone, that civilian would need protection, for if he was caught by the enemy for any reason he would be shot as a spy."

A targeting system developed for the SCR-584 would later help Allied pilots target enemy vehicles in snowy conditions at the Battle of the Bulge in Europe.

Carol Davenport recalled simpler technological lessons from her father, an avid collector of antique cars.

"He was insistent that my sister and I learn to change a tire," she said.

Davenport was born on Dec. 31, 1915, in Schenectady, N.Y., where his father worked as a schoolteacher. He graduated from Union College in Schenectady in 1937 and earned a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Pittsburgh based on the work he did at the MIT Radiation Lab.

Union College president Stephen Ainlay said Davenport was an active alumnus who generously counseled young people.

"There are not many alums to begin with who have that connection with history and time with the school," he said. "Until the time of his death, he was very free with his ideas on how to encourage students."

In a 1991 oral history interview with the IEEE, a professional association formerly known as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Davenport said he developed an early interest in science and was an avid reader of "Popular Mechanics." At a young age, he said, he made small electric motors from paper clips and copper wire and low-voltage batteries.

Davenport credited a college physics professor with giving him his start in science.

In 1934, he was removing insects from plants for 35 cents an hour when Peter Wold, the chairman of the physics department, invited him to help make scientific drawings, he told a Union College interviewer.

"It's better than picking bugs off salvias," he said.

Davenport had a 24-year career with the GTE Corp. and various subsidiaries, retiring as vice president and chief scientist. He also taught at MIT and Harvard, where he was responsible for the nuclear lab.


Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press

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October 19, 2011

Claire Ryan posted to the memorial.

October 10, 2011

J Power posted to the memorial.

October 7, 2011

Someone posted to the memorial.

25 Entries

Claire Ryan

October 19, 2011

Dear Carol,
You probably do not remember me, but we lived in the house behind yours when you were very little. In fact, I remember when your parents brought you home. Lee and Anne were like a second set of parents to me. I am so sorry to hear of your dad's death. He was the quintessential gentle man, and one whom I admired very much. He and your mother were a wonderful couple and made such a lovely home for you and Jeanne. I remember it all very fondly.
My sincerest condolences on all your losses.

J Power

October 10, 2011

More people in the World needed like him. Top Man. RIP.

October 7, 2011

Please accept my condolences during this time of sorrow.

Tom & Carol Kidd

October 5, 2011

We met Lee in 2001 on a caravan and will miss this gentle man.

PUMPKIN O'NEAL

October 5, 2011

WOW

October 5, 2011

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

james willner

October 5, 2011

May the eternal light shine upon him...

J ALLAN USMC ret

October 5, 2011

AMERICAN PIONEER AND HERO!

Michael Driscoll

October 5, 2011

As a military pilot many years later thank you for your brilliant insight into radar that saved so many lives and allowed military aircraft to fly safely through mother nature's worst weather as well. My Dad served in the signal corps in radar in WW2 and probably knew of you as well.

Jane Dowling

October 5, 2011

God bless you. R.I.P.

Mark Gaunt

October 5, 2011

As a miltary flier I used Mr Davenport's radar-thank you, Mr D-RIP.

L B

October 5, 2011

Blessings to you and all those who did their part and shared their lives to encourage others to.

Henryk Zaleski US Navy Retired

October 5, 2011

Rest in peace and there among the stars you will not need radar but the gentle light of the Lord.

John Slough

October 5, 2011

Mr. Davenport's accomplishments are noted in the book "The Invention That Changed The World" by Robert Buderi.

October 5, 2011

May your hearts soon be filled with wonderful memories of joyful times together as you celebrate a life well lived.

October 5, 2011

This obit tells me that Mr Davenport is a remarkable and very admirable man. May he rest in peace.

r m kraus/akron

October 5, 2011

God Bless Thanks watching over my Uncles in such a special way

Jennifer Neeman

October 5, 2011

The United States of America is very fortunate to have had a brilliant citizen such as you. You saved so many lives. May you rest in peace.

David Hyde

October 5, 2011

He mosy likely saved thousands of allied lives. Thank you sir, for you service. Men like you mad America the great country it is today.

Victoria&Andrew

October 4, 2011

Daughter of a Veteran
A story of many Men&Woman
who gave thier services
thru the time of years and months
Thank you LEE rip spiritually'

howdy wright

October 4, 2011

thank you for your service. you saved many countless american lives, god bless and keep you forever. ex army sgt

October 3, 2011

I speak for all of us at RMA to tell what a great privilege it was to know him. His two presentations to us were marvelously full of the science he lived. His smile, his greeting and the friendships he formed among us were infectious. A great sadness passes among us and yet a joy that we were his comrades late in life.
John de Csepel
Chmn. of the RMA Program Committee

October 2, 2011

Having known Lee only a very short time I must say I still will miss him as much as any one I have ever met. It has been a joy being with Lee and Doris at first on Mondays where I heard his stories as we listened to great music at dinner, and then moved on to Saturday evenings where there was a piano bar (lobby) where everyone enjoyed our geat American Music. What Jeff and Bradley Kline have said need not be repeated but ought to be savored.
I am so happy I had the opportunity you Lee!
with Love, Bob Lucas

Kimberly Moya

October 2, 2011

To my uncle, my godfather and a true mentor. I will miss you greatly. Still have videos of you dancing with my now 18 year old daughter when she was a preschooler. You were a joy to be around and the entire family will miss you as we miss Anne.

Kim and Mark Moya
Sunnyvale, CA

Jeff/Bradley Kline

October 1, 2011

My son, Bradley, and I, along with Mr. Malozzi plowed the driveway and shoveled the sidewalk and front porch at Dr. Davenport's Greenwich residence every winter for the past five years. Mr. Malozzi took care of the Davenport grounds year-round for years before that, until Mr. Malozzi retired. Three winters ago, Bradley and I met Dr. Davenport for the first time at his home while plowing his driveway. Dr. Davenport came out through the side garage door, and the conversation started by Dr. Davenport commending us on the good job we were doing. Some how the conversation switched to the life of Dr. Davenport, as he told us about growing up in Schenectady, the son of a math teacher. His hobby was making crystal radios. He explained that his love of math came in handy while working summers during college for GE, reviewing the accuracy of the pension department's data. He learned to calculate in his head the product of any number times 4.5%, the pension rate for all GE employees at the time. He mentioned that throughout his life, he couldn't stop himself from performing that simple math function, whenever working with numbers.

But then Dr. Davenport's conversation took an unusual turn, as Bradley and I were soon taken back in time to the year 1940 and World War II. By the end of the conversation, Bradley and I realized that we were standing in the presence of a true American hero. The dedicated work that Dr. Davenport performed at MIT in the development of radar with military applications, especially the anti-aircraft guns was to later pay off by changing the very outcome of battles and ultimately the outcome of World War II. Dr. Davenport thought nothing of putting himself in harms way at the landing at Normandy or along the English coastline setting up a chain of radar stations to detect incoming German planes and "buzz" bombs. The conversation ended when Dr. Davenport mentioned, "go to the library, and check out the book, "The Invention That Changed the World".

Bradley and I headed to the library the next day, and there we found 800-1,000 pages of fascinating American history. American history that isn't covered in the school text books. And there was our hero in a photograph standing on top of a tractor trailer with a radar dish attached atop. As we read the book we felt the need to speak with Dr. Davenport again, for we had so many questions that we wanted to ask of him. I mentioned to Bradley that we need to have Dr. Davenport speak at his school, AITE, in Stamford. He could speak to the history classes, the physics classes, why he should speak to the entire student body. I contacted Dr. Davenport to ask if he would be willing to speak to the students, and received a "yes, why of course, I often speak to groups". I then contacted the principal at AITE, Mr. Gross, but for some reason the visit by Dr. Davenport was never arranged.

And now with the passing of Dr. Davenport, his life and story will live on with his family and friends. For those of you who knew Dr. Davenport only in passing, as Bradley and I did, take the time to read, " The Invention that Changed the World". You will come to know and honor our true American hero, Dr. Lee Davenport.

Jeff and Bradley Kline

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October 19, 2011

Claire Ryan posted to the memorial.

October 10, 2011

J Power posted to the memorial.

October 7, 2011

Someone posted to the memorial.