- John Barrett (diplomat)
Infobox Officeholder
name = John Barrett
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1866|11|28
birth_place = Grafton,Vermont
death_date = death date and age|1938|10|17|1866|11|28
death_place = Bellows Falls,Vermont
nationality = American
party =
spouse = Mary Tanner Candy
relations =
children =
residence =
alma_mater = B.A.,Dartmouth College
occupation = American diplomat
profession =
religion =
website =
footnotes =John Barrett (
November 28 1866 –October 17 1938 ) was aUnited States diplomat and one of the most influential early directors general of thePan American Union . On his death, the "New York Times" commented that he had "done more than any other person of his generation to promote closer relations among the American republics".Biography
Barrett was born in
Grafton, Vermont . He studied at bothVanderbilt University andDartmouth College , eventually graduating from the latter with a Bachelor of the Arts degree in 1889. From 1889 to 1894, he worked as a journalist on the west coast (especially Tacoma, Seattle, Portland, and San Francisco). While working as a journalist, he so impressed PresidentGrover Cleveland during a meeting that he was appointed as the United States Minister toSiam (nowThailand ). He served in that country for four years working to improve trade relations before returning to life as a journalist, working as a war correspondent during theSpanish-American War and then as a diplomatic adviser to AdmiralGeorge Dewey . (He would write a biography of Dewey in 1899.) Finally, he was appointed as a delegate to the secondPan-American Conference in 1901 through the following year.In 1903, he was appointed as the Minister to
Argentina , and though he only served in that position for one year, PresidentTheodore Roosevelt later remarked that he had began a "new United States-Argentine era". He was then appointed as Minister to Panama and then to Colombia.In 1907, he was appointed at the first Director General of the Bureau of American Republics, an international organization that was renamed as the Pan American Union in 1910 (and subsequently reorganized in 1948 as the Organization of American States). He served in this capacity for fourteen years. During that period, he also founded the Pan-American Society of the United States, was Secretary General of 1916's Pan-American Scientific Congress, and presided over the Pan-American Commercial Congresses of 1911 and 1919.
In 1924, he briefly entered politics by running for the
United States Senate as a Republican, but withdrew from the race before the election.In his life, Barrett received honorary doctorates from
Tulane University , theUniversity of Southern California , theNational University of Colombia inBogotá , and theNational University of Panama . He also received state decorations fromVenezuela andChina .He died of
pneumonia in 1938.References
*cite news |title = Dr. Barrett, Envoy to Four Nations, Dies | work =
The Washington Post |page = X5| date =1938-10-18
*cite news |title = John Barrett, 71, Trade Developer | work =The New York Times |page = 25|date =1938-10-18
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