James Dougherty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Edward Dougherty (April 12, 1921 in Los Angeles, California - August 15, 2005 in San Rafael, California) was an American author and police officer who is best known for being the first husband of Marilyn Monroe.
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[edit] Biography
Dougherty was the youngest of five children of Edward and Ethel Dougherty, and was born in Los Angeles. He attended Van Nuys High School where he acted in plays, and played football.
Marilyn Monroe and Dougherty married on June 19, 1942, at 8:30 pm, at the home of Chester Howell in Los Angeles.[1]
In 1943, Dougherty joined the United States Merchant Marine. Prior to that he worked with Robert Mitchum in a defense plant. He was ordered to boot camp on Santa Catalina Island, California, then sent overseas in 1944. Norma Jeane started to work for Radioplane Company, where she was discovered. She moved out of her mother-in-law's home and stopped writing to Dougherty. She filed for divorce in Las Vegas, Nevada; it was finalized on September 13, 1946.
Dougherty married Patricia Scoman in 1947, and joined the LAPD. He was one of the police officers who held back the crowd at the premiere of his former wife's movie, The Asphalt Jungle.
[edit] On his relationship with Marilyn Monroe
In The Secret Happiness of Marilyn Monroe and To Norma Jeane with Love, Jimmie, he wrote that they were in love but dreams of stardom lured her away. She always maintained theirs was a marriage of convenience. She was furious when he claimed to Photoplay in 1953 she threatened to jump off the Santa Monica Pier if he left her. He later appeared on To Tell the Truth as "Marilyn Monroe's real first husband." He sold signed copies of his books on his website [1].
When informed of her death, the New York Times reported that Dougherty replied "I'm sorry" and continued his LAPD patrol; he did not attend her funeral. He admitted to A&E Network his mother asked him if he'd marry Norma Jeane.[clarification needed] Although he maintained in his books that he didn't mind if she modeled, his sister wrote in the 12/1952 Modern Screen Magazine he left Norma Jeane because she wanted to pursue modeling. He admitted to Lifetime's "Intimate Portrait" that he cut off her monthly allotment when he was served with divorce papers.
On 7 August 2008, a Maine judge who says "substantial fraud" was proven ordered documentary producer Schani Krug to repay more than $500,000 to the family of Marilyn Monroe's first husband and to investors in a little-seen movie, which was made in 2003. The judge said money must be repaid with interest to investors and to heirs of Monroe's first husband, James Dougherty, who lived in Auburn and died in 2005. Lawyers said Krug spent investors' money on himself and injured parties never received promised proceeds from the documentary.[2]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ To Norma Jeane with Love, Jimmie, by Jim Dougherty, 2000
- ^ http://www.seacoastonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080808/NEWS/80808009
[edit] References
- The Marilyn Encyclopedia by Adam Victor (The Overlook Press, Woodstock, New York, 1999 Adam Victor, s.v. James Dougherty)
^ The Marilyn Encyclopedia p. 201.

