Eddie Doherty
Eddie Doherty | |
---|---|
Born |
October 30, 1890 Chicago, US |
Died |
May 4, 1975 Combermere, Canada |
Nationality | American, naturalized Canadian |
Occupation | Reporter, author, founder of Madonna House Apostolate |
Spouse(s) | Catherine Doherty |
Children | Edward Doherty Jr., Jack Jim Doherty |
Edward J. "Eddie" Doherty (October 30, 1890 – May 4, 1975) was a famed American newspaper reporter, best-selling author, Oscar-nominated screenwriter, co-founder of the Madonna House Apostolate, and later ordained a priest in the Melkite Greek Catholic Church.
Life
Eddie Doherty was born in Chicago in 1890, the oldest of ten children in an Irish Catholic family born to Police Lieutenant Edward Doherty and his wife Ellen Rodgers. At the age of 13 he entered a Servite monastery in Wisconsin. After two years he left the seminary, returned to Chicago, and went to work at the City Press.[1]
Starting as a newspaper copy boy, Eddie worked at various other Chicago newspapers, including the Examiner, the Record-Herald, the Tribune, the Herald, and the American. It was at the American that he began writing columns. He married his childhood sweetheart, Marie Ryan, on December 15, 1914. His wife died in the 1918 flu epidemic, leaving Eddie with a baby son. In his sorrow, Eddie Doherty left the Church.[1]
The following summer he married his second wife, Mildred Frisby, on July 16, 1919. Eddie had a second son, Jack Jim. Back at the Tribune, he helped establish the Joseph Medill School of Journalism. Eddie Doherty and his wife and two children moved west, Eddie to work for the Chicago Tribune's Hollywood bureau. He "made his reputation initially covering such scandals as the Wally Reid case and the Fatty Arbuckle trial". The News' trucks and billboards proclaimed him "The Star Reporter of America"; The Mirror "billed him as America's Highest Paid Reporter".[1]
In 1939, disaster struck once again, as Mildred died in a freak accident (from a fall) while out for a walk alone.[2] This time, however, Eddie found peace for his grieving in returning to the Catholic Church.
In 1940, Eddie met Baroness Catherine de Hueck at her Friendship House mission while doing a story on Harlem. Their friendship turned to romance, and they wed on June 25, 1943.
In 1944, Eddie's screenplay for the World War II film The Sullivans was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Story.
Meanwhile, the staff at Friendship House did not take well to Catherine's marriage to Eddie, and complained that Catherine no longer lived in celibacy as they were required to do. This and other differences eventually led to Eddie and Catherine moving to Combermere, Ontario, Canada and starting a new apostolate called Madonna House in 1947. Here they founded their own newspaper, Restoration, which has remained in continuous circulation.
In 1969, Eddie obtained permission to transfer from the Latin Church to the Byzantine Rite Melkite Greek Catholic Church (which allows married men to become priests), and on August 15, 1969, Eddie was ordained a Catholic priest at the age of seventy-eight by Archbishop Joseph Raya.
In 1975, after a period of ill-health and surgery, Eddie slipped into a coma. He died the next day, on May 4, 1975. A simple wooden cross marks his grave, reading "All my words for the Word."
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Hollingsworth, Gerelyn, "On this day: Eddie Doherty", National Catholic Reporter, May 4, 2011
- ↑ Doherty, Eddie. Gall and Honey: The Story of a Newspaperman Madonna House Publications The ISBN even at the publisher (978-0-921440-13-8) is bad, causing a checksum error.
- Bazzett, Mary. The Life of Eddie Doherty. Combermere: Madonna House Publications, 1998.
External links
- Madonna House Apostolate biography of Eddie Doherty
- Books by Eddie Doherty
- Works by or about Eddie Doherty at Internet Archive
- Eddie Doherty at the Internet Movie Database