William C. Doherty

{{Short description|American union leader and diplomat}}

William Charles Doherty (February 23, 1902 – August 9, 1987) was an American labor union leader and ambassador.

Born in Glendale, Ohio, Doherty became a telegraph messenger in Cincinnati when he was 14. The year after, he was promoted to become a telegraph operator, and he joined the Commercial Telegraphers Union of America. In 1919, he falsified his age in order to join the U.S. Army, and he served in a secret operation in Siberia. He was promoted to become a sergeant, and in 1921, he was made chief radio operator on Corregidor, in the Philippines.{{cite news |title=William C. Doherty; Envoy, Postal Union Leader |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-08-13-mn-1164-story.html |access-date=14 March 2023 |newspaper=LA Times |date=August 13, 1987}}{{cite news |last1=Barron |first1=James |title=William C. Doherty, Ex-President Of Letter Carriers' Union, Is Dead |work=New York Times |date=August 12, 1987}}

After leaving the army, Doherty became a letter carrier in Cincinnati. He joined the National Association of Letter Carriers, and in 1928, he was elected as president of his union branch. In 1932, he won election as president of the Ohio Letter Carriers' Association, and then in 1941, he became president of the national union.

Doherty was additionally elected as a vice-president of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), and as a delegate of the federation, he was one of the founders of the new International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. He also served as the AFL's representative to the British Trades Union Congress. In 1958, he achieved a pay increase for letter carriers by organizing rallies at Capitol Hill, and a day of prayer.

In 1962, John F. Kennedy appointed Doherty as United States ambassador to Jamaica. He retired in 1964.

References

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{{succession box|title=President of the National Association of Letter Carriers|years=1941–1962|before=Edward J. Gainor|after=Jerome J. Keating}}

{{succession box|title=American Federation of Labor delegate to the Trades Union Congress|years=1945|with=George Meany|before=Hugo Ernst|before2=Holt Ross|after=Edward J. Brown|after2=Thomas Kennedy}}

{{succession box|title=Seventh Vice-President of the American Federation of Labor|years=1951–1953|before=William C. Birthright|after=David Dubinsky}}

{{succession box|title=Sixth Vice-President of the American Federation of Labor|years=1953–1955|before=William C. Birthright|after=Federation merged}}

{{succession box|title=AFL-CIO delegate to the Trades Union Congress|years=1959|with=Joseph A. Beirne|before=George McGregor Harrison|before2=Jacob Potofsky|after=David J. McDonald|after2=Lee W. Minton}}

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{{succession box|title=United States Ambassador to Jamaica|before=Irving G. Cheslaw|after=Wilson T. M. Beale, Jr.|years=1962–1964}}

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{{US Ambassadors to Jamaica}}

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Category:1902 births

Category:1987 deaths

Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Jamaica

Category:American trade union leaders

Category:People from Glendale, Ohio

Category:Trade unionists from Ohio

Category:Vice presidents of the American Federation of Labor

Category:Vice presidents of the AFL-CIO

Category:20th-century American diplomats