Mourners prepared to gather on Friday in a corner of western Pennsylvania to say their final goodbyes to Corey Comperatore, the father of two who was killed during an attempt to assassinate former President Donald J. Trump at a rally last weekend.
The funeral was set to take place at 11 a.m. at the church in Cabot, Pa., where Mr. Comperatore, 50, was a longtime member. Afterward, a procession of fire trucks — as many as 500, some from as far as Florida and Texas — will travel from the church to the Buffalo Township Volunteer Fire Company in neighboring Sarver, where Mr. Comperatore served for decades.
Mr. Comperatore’s life revolved around this small pocket of Pennsylvania: He grew up in Sarver and still lived there with his high school sweetheart and two daughters. He attended church in Cabot and graduated from high school in nearby Freeport.
People here are not accustomed to crowds, but crowds are what they have spent the week preparing for as Mr. Comperatore has been thrust into the national spotlight.
A large electronic billboard above a road in Freeport displayed a photo of Mr. Comperatore, who Gov. Josh Shapiro said dived in front of his family to protect them as shots rang out. Next to his photo was a phrase that has been uttered by the governor and residents across Pennsylvania: “A Real Hero.”
On Thursday night, Mr. Trump singled out Mr. Comperatore during his speech at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, saying that he had “lost his life selflessly.” Mr. Comperatore’s firefighter uniform stood onstage near Mr. Trump as he spoke. At one point, the former president kissed the helmet and asked the crowd to observe a moment of silence for “our friend, Corey.”
“This is one of those things that’s a once-in-a-century situation,” said Gary Risch Jr., a longtime friend and fellow volunteer firefighter involved in the funeral preparations.
Questions have continued to mount over how the Secret Service could allow a would-be assassin to scale a building within a rifle’s range of the former president and take aim, killing Mr. Comperatore and seriously wounding two other rally attendees in Butler, Pa., last Saturday.
The agency’s embattled director, Kimberly Cheatle, has faced calls to resign. On Thursday, Speaker Mike Johnson went farther, becoming the highest-ranking official to call on President Biden to fire her. The House Oversight Committee has scheduled a hearing for Monday, but it was not clear whether Ms. Cheatle would attend.
Nearly a week after the attack, investigators are still unsure of the gunman’s motive, and much about his life remains a mystery.
On Wednesday, F.B.I. officials told lawmakers they had found no indication that the gunman, Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, of Bethel Park, Pa., held strong partisan or ideological views. They said he had searched for images of both Mr. Trump and President Biden, looked up the dates of the Democratic National Convention and Mr. Trump’s public appearances, and sought information about “major depressive disorder.”
The two men who were wounded at the rally — James Copenhaver, 74, and David Dutch, 57 — were in serious but stable condition on Thursday, said Bill Toland, a spokesman for Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, where the men are being treated.
Mr. Copenhaver, from Moon Township, Pa., was a retiree who once worked at the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board and who played in a band. Mr. Dutch, of New Kensington, Pa., was a Marine Corps veteran and a leader in his local chapter of the Marine Corps League, a service and advocacy organization.
Mr. Dutch was also a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 92 in Lower Burrell, Pa. Rich Ratajczak, a Vietnam veteran and past commander, said he had been watching the rally on TV and saw someone get shot. But it was only when he went to the club later that he learned it was his friend.
“I said, ‘Oh my God, I saw what happened, but I didn’t realize who it was,’” he said.
The club held a prayer for Mr. Dutch during bingo on Tuesday night, and Mr. Ratajczak said that members had signed a giant “Get Well” card for him.
Services for Mr. Comperatore began on Thursday with a public visitation at a banquet hall in Freeport. Hundreds of people, many wearing black dresses and suits, stood outside the building in the afternoon in a line that stretched at least a quarter-mile, waiting to pay their respects. Two snipers were stationed on the roof, and two more on an adjacent building.
Inside, more officers scanned the line of mourners. Snapshots of the family were projected onto a large screen. One showed a black Doberman resting on Mr. Comperatore’s shoulder. Another showed his wife and daughters at a graduation ceremony.
A third pictured him holding a birthday cake with two candles. It appeared to be a recent photograph: Mr. Comperatore had turned 50 a month before he was killed.
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