‘A hard, gritty capitalist’, Davenport was one of the most successful Staffordshire pottery manufacturers.
A native of Leek, Davenport hailed from yeoman stock. His father’s death when he was six years old compelled Davenport to secure employment soon after, as his mother had but a ‘small fortune’.
In 1813 Davenport purchased the Westwood estate near his birthplace for £15,500.
After his election in second place, Davenport was accurately described by Charles Dod as a ‘moderate Reformer’.
Davenport was returned without opposition at the 1835 general election, stressing that his opinions were unchanged and that he would support or oppose Peel’s new Conservative government on the merits of their measures.
On Davenport’s death in 1848, the Westwood estate passed to his eldest son John Davenport II (1799-1862), a Harrow and Oxford-educated barrister who lived the life of a country gentleman and later moved to Foxley, Herefordshire.
