Davenport, Arthur K.
Biographical Note: Arthur K. Davenport
Arthur K. Davenport is an aviation and aerospace engineer who worked for Hamilton Standard and the Boeing Company.
He was born in New York to Earl and Ruth Davenport. His father served in the Army Air Corps and afterwards worked for Sikorsky Helicopters and Republic Aviation.
Davenport attended the Stevens Institute of Technology (New Jersey) and participated in the school’s ROTC program. After graduation, he served in the U.S. Air Force as a maintenance officer with the 463rd Troop Carrier Wing.
In the mid-1960s, Davenport was hired by Hamilton Standard as an engineer for the Apollo Program. His work included contributing to the design and development of the Apollo spacesuit’s Life Support System backpack. Later, he was involved in developing the Environmental Control System for the Space Shuttle Program. While at Hamilton, he also earned a master’s degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (Connecticut).
In the mid-1980s, after 21 years at Hamilton, Davenport and his family relocated to Washington State, where he accepted a job at Boeing. His projects included design work for the 747 and for Combat Edge, a pressure vest designed to protect pilots from high G forces. In 1997, he became a Designated Engineering Representative (DER) for the Federal Aviation Administration. As a DER, he helped to test the Environmental Control System for the 747.
Davenport retired from Boeing in 2007 but returned to work as a job shopper. He retired again in 2013. Since retirement, he has self-published a number of mystery novels, including Fall to Earth (2014), Beyond the Breakers (2014), Hidden Failure (2014), and The Running Water River Bridge (2016).
Davenport married his wife, Wendy, in 1963.
Biographical information derived from interview and additional information provided by interviewee.