Background
George Davenport was born on January 1, 1783, in Lincolnshire, United Kingdom.
George Davenport was born on January 1, 1783, in Lincolnshire, United Kingdom.
George went to sea at the age of 18 and experienced adventures, including some months of imprisonment in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1803. The young sailor found himself in the New York City harbor in 1804, when an injury resulting from the rescue of a crewmate who had fallen overboard prevented his planned return to England.
With his ship long departed, Davenport traveled in the countryside and enlisted in the U.S. Army at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1805. His military career lasted for a decade, with assignments in New Orleans and along the Sabine River. With the arrival of the War of 1812, he saw combat at Lundy’s Lane in the Niagara region of Canada. His association with the military would continue after his discharge in 1815. Employed by a government contractor, Colonel William Morrison, Davenport transported goods from St. Louis to the newly constructed Fort Armstrong on Rock Island in the Mississippi River.
In 1816 Davenport built a home on the island and brought his new family from Cincinnati, Ohio. Relations between Native Americans and other Americans were generally tense at best. The Winnebago Indians, with whom Davenport had developed a social and trading relationship, gave him the name Sag-a-nosh, meaning “Englishman.” Capitalizing on the friendly relations, he expanded his trade to include the Sauk and Meskwaki. In an effort to avoid bloodshed, which would have been bad for business, Davenport attempted to intervene on the Indians’ behalf by visiting President Andrew Jackson in Washington. If, in fact, that extraordinary effort was made, we know that it failed, as war arrived in the 1830s.
With the beginning of the Black Hawk War, Davenport, because of his military experience and his position in the community, was appointed quartermaster at the rank of colonel in the Illinois militia. His opposition to Colonel Stroud’s tactics in the war would interfere with future fame and fortune when Stroud became a member of the Illinois legislature and blocked an effort to rename Farnhamsburg, later renamed Rock Island, in honor of Davenport. Undaunted by the rejection, a group of eight men met at Davenport’s new mansion on the island in 1835 to plan a new town on the Iowa side of the Mississippi.
The company purchased land for the new town from Antoine Le Claire, one of the eight, and named the new community Davenport. The treaty negotiations that ended all claims of the Sauk and Meskwaki in Iowa, in 1842 ended his trade with them as well. Davenport would devote the remainder of his life to improving his properties in Iowa and Illinois and spending winters in St. Louis and Washington, D.C.
While other members of his family were celebrating the 1845 Independence Day in Rock Island, Davenport remained in his island mansion, where he was robbed by several men who beat him severely and left him for dead. Davenport did die as a result of the injuries he sustained that night but not before providing a detailed description of the criminals. Davenport was buried the following day near his home, with rites performed by Meskwaki. Later a minister performed a Christian funeral service.
Davenport was a man of a free, generous, and open-hearted disposition, pleasing in conversation, and full of wit and humor. He delighted to recount anecdotes connected with his wild and adventurous life.
In 1814, Davenport married Margaret Bowling Lewis, a widow 14 years his elder, and they remained married until his death. However, all of Davenport's children were born out of wedlock which has long been somewhat of an open secret.
Susan Lewis was Davenport's 16-year-old step-daughter, was the mother of his first son, George L'Oste, in 1817. Also, she was the mother of his second son, Bailey, who was born in 1824. Davenport's only known daughter, Elizabeth, was born through a relationship with Catherine Pouitt, a laundress at Fort Armstrong on Rock Island, in 1835.