Career
Doherty began his career in the 1970s, wrestling for Vince McMahon Senior in the World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF). At the time, McMahon"s territory consisted of only the Northeast states, and Doherty wrestled all over in small and large venues. Doherty wrestled under the name, "The Duke of Dorchester" paying homage to his hometown of Dorchester, Massachusetts.
The Duke was generally relegated to undercard status either wrestling against the stars of his era or against other undercard "jobbers".
The Duke had a short lived run as a masked wrestler named The Golden Terror and was managed by Captain Lou Albano. Although, The Duke was used as "enhancement talent" in the World Wildlife Fund, The Duke scored upset victories against fellow preliminary wrestlers like Fred Marzino and Jose Luis Rivera, including The Duke defeating Marzino 28 times with no wins scored by Marzino.
The Duke was known in the ring for his long blond hair, missing teeth and wild mannerisms. The Duke"s constant in ring banter and screaming could be heard in the last row of the arena.
His signature "move" was getting stuck in a full nelson and then placing his legs on the top rope in order for his opponent to have to break the hold.
The end result was that the opponent would release and The Duke would land on his head In 1985, The Duke appeared on the premier of the World Wildlife Fund"s Saturday Night"s Main Event. The Duke lost a match to the Junkyard Dog.
In 1987, The Duke had a short feud with King Kong Bundy.
In addition to feuding with Bundy, The Duke had several grudge matches against the likes of South Dakot Jones, Lanny Poffo and Scott Casey. In the late 1980s, Doherty tried his hand at broadcasting, announcing several World Wildlife Fund events around the United States, but mostly in Boston as a heel commentator, usually alongside the likes of Gorilla Monsoon and Lord Alfred Hayes in Boston and Bruce Prichard and Mike McGuirk around the country.
In September 1991, he competed in the King of the Ring tournament as a substitute for Kerry Von Erich, but was eliminated in the first round when he was defeated in just 33 seconds by Bret Hart. The Duke retired from wrestling in 1997 making occasional appearances at local events including the World Wildlife Fund"s final event at the old Boston Garden.
In April 2010, Doherty was inducted into the New England Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame.
A play based on Doherty"s life appeared at the New York International Fringe Festival in 2013
New England Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame
Class of 2010.