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Virginia Dougherty

Virginia Dougherty

Virginia Dougherty

02/05/1931 - 03/16/2025

Virginia Ruth Bryan  Dougherty died peacefully  in Houston on the afternoon  of March 16 with family at  her side. She was 94. Virginia was a sixth-generation Houstonian, born on February 5, 1931. (Her mother’s side of the family descended from the Old Three Hundred, the original 300 Anglo  families brought by Stephen F. Austin to settle in Texas.)

After graduating from  Lamar High School in Houston, Virginia Ruth Bryan left  home to attend Southwestern  University in Georgetown,  Texas. She had not been there long before meeting the man with whom she would spend  the next 70 years.

Virginia met Jack Ben  Dougherty, a WWII veteran, on a double date. The two were married in 1950 at St.  Paul’s United Methodist Church in Houston.

In the years that followed, Virginia lived the itinerant  life of an Air Force officer’s  life, assigned to exotic locations like Spain and Bermuda, and less exotic spots  like Burns Flat, Oklahoma.  During these years, Virginia raised three sons and  completed her undergraduate degree.

After retiring from the Air  Force, the family returned  to Houston, where Virginia  completed a master’s degree at the University of Houston  and began a 25-year career  as a second-grade teacher  at Frostwood Elementary  School in Spring Branch.  She was a gifted teacher to hundreds of children, loved   by everyone from janitors to  principals, fellow teachers,  parents and students, some  of whom stayed in touch with  her until the end of her life.

Virginia was an incredible cook and devoted mother  who provided a gentle, sensitive influence in a house full  of males. She never raised her voice or said an unkind word.

She had a great sense of humor and a surprising competitive streak. She loved to  play tennis and was an expert bridge player.

After her retirement, Virginia and Jack moved to  Sun City in Georgetown, not  far from where they first met. Their new home was close  to the family’s cattle ranch in Bertram, where Jack and Virginia enjoyed spending  much of their time.

Through 70 years, their romance never dimmed and  their love for one another always obvious. With Virginia  by his side, Jack died in 2021, at 97.  Soon after Jack’s passing, Virginia returned to  Houston, where she spent the remainder of her life enjoying three generations of her  growing family.

She will be remembered and missed by all who knew her.  She is survived by her sister, LynnDee Munson Keels;  sons Pat and his wife KJ,  Mike and his wife Kathy, and  Doug and his wife Maureen;  along with seven grandchildren: Matt, Jim, Joe, Kayla,  Connor, Ben and Katie; and  five great-grandchildren:  Campbell, Avery, Hayes, Annie and Willa.

A memorial service for Virginia will be at 11 a.m.  on Saturday, May 10, at St. Paul’s United Methodist  Church in Houston.