Donna Lee (Click) Davis, 68, of Rogersville, Mo., died at 12:24 p.m. Monday (Oct. 21, 2024) at her home with her husband and sister by her side. Her funeral will be at 3 p.m. Friday at Greenlawn Funeral Home East, Springfield, Mo. Entombment will be at Mount Hope Cemetery, Perryville, Mo. Visitation will be 1 to 3 p.m. Friday at Greenlawn.
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Donna Lee (Click) Davis, 68, of Rogersville, Mo., died at 12:24 p.m. Monday (Oct. 21, 2024) at her home with her husband and sister by her side.
Her funeral will be at 3 p.m. Friday at Greenlawn Funeral Home East, Springfield, Mo. Entombment will be at Mount Hope Cemetery, Perryville, Mo. Visitation will be 1 to 3 p.m. Friday at Greenlawn.
Donna was born Sept. 28, 1956, in Morris, Illinois, the daughter of Glennen and Pauline Click. She married Daryl Davis on April 6, 1991, in Las Vegas.
Surviving are her husband, Daryl Davis, Rogersville, Mo; one sister, Belinda Click, Bloomington, Illinois; two brothers, Randy Click, Martin, Ky., and Doug (Chris) Click, Morris, Illinois; a stepdaughter, Ashley Klinksiek and her husband, Blake; two grandchildren, Carson and Alivia Klinksiek; and many loving aunts, uncle, cousins and close friends.
Donna grew up in Dwight, Illinois. She graduated from Dwight Township High School and earned a bachelor’s degree from Illinois State University and a master’s in criminology from Central Missouri State University.
Donna served in the U.S. Army for three years after high school being discharged with the rank of Spc. 4. She was stationed in Landstuhl and Mannheim, Germany, most of that time and traveled extensively throughout Europe. She retired as a correctional treatment specialist from the U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Mo., after a 20-year career. Upon retirement, she and Daryl operated their own trucking business, D&D Freight Lines.
Extremely friendly, outgoing and funny, Donna never met a stranger. Her network of friends dates from high school until the present. She and Daryl enjoyed many trips to Las Vegas, Jamaica and Mexico. By the end of each trip, Donna was friends with everyone at the resort. Donna believed in “treating others as you want to be treated.” She lived by that credo which made even inmates at her workplace fond of her.
Caring and compassionate, Donna often helped others who were ill. She put her life on hold many times to stay with aunts, grandparents and her mother and father as they neared the end of life. She had been guardian to her 95-year-old Uncle Richard for many years. At the start of her cancer treatment as she considered participating in clinical trials, she said, “If I can help someone else, why wouldn’t I?”
Donna’s absence will be deeply felt by her friends and loved ones.
The family wants to thank Oncology Hematology Associates and St. Croix Hospice for their care and compassion over the past year.
Memorials may be made to the American Lung Association.


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