John Barrett 1889 was born in Grafton, Vermont on November 28, 1866. Seventy-one years later,
he died but a few miles away in Bellows Falls. In those intervening years,
however, he embarked upon one of the most storied diplomatic careers in United
States history.
Five years after his graduation from Dartmouth College, Barrett's newspaper work so
impressed President Grover Cleveland that he decided to appoint the then-twenty-eight-year-old as minister to Siam. Barrett would subsequently serve as commercial
commissioner in Japan, Korea, China, and Australia, followed by jaunts to
Mexico, Argentina, and most difficult of all, an appointment as minister to
Panama, which had recently seceded from Colombia and was ramping up its
construction of the Panama Canal. Barrett so ameliorated the issues between
Panama and Colombia, said his Associated Press obituary, that "it was a
personal triumph, for only short months before the women of Bogotá had been
shearing their tresses to make a rope 'to hang the first Yankee who comes
here'."
Barrett
moved to Washington D.C. in 1907 to head the Pan-American Union. While there,
noted President Theodore Roosevelt, he "developed it from an unimportant dying
government bureau into a world-recognized international organization for peace,
friendship and commerce." In this capacity, Barrett endeavored to assist his
alma mater in any way possible. In early 1917, President Ernest M. Hopkins
needed such help.
Dartmouth College at the outbreak of the
Great War needed both military equipment and an
officer
detailed to campus for its training programs. Both were necessary to accommodate the preponderance
of students who wished to train for eventual service. Though necessary, they
were understandably scarce in the opening days of the war. Nevertheless,
Hopkins placed his complete trust in Barrett, writing to nobody else in
Washington on the chance that he may "be in danger of mixing up anything that
you may do in this matter."
Barrett
immediately set out upon assisting the College’s preparedness efforts. Though
he told Hopkins in a telegram immediately that a regular army officer would be "impossible" to provide, he attempted to gain an official endorsement from the
War Department for one Captain Porter Chase, former head of a cadet training
program in Boston who Hopkins brought up to Hanover to lead Dartmouth’s
training programs.
Through
his contacts, Barrett succeeded in gaining Chase official recognition. After
Hopkins thanked him, Barrett noted in his response "the great pride which all
of the Dartmouth Alumni feel in the splendid spirit
which the undergraduates of
the old college have shown under the stress and demands of wartimes and
conditions." Indeed, stories of Dartmouth students' enthusiastic proclivity for
military service had already reached the annals of power in Washington,
swelling this particularly influential alumnus with pride for his alma mater.
To read the correspondence between Barrett and Hopkins, come to Rauner and ask to see President Hopkins' presidential papers for the academic year 1916-17 (DP-11, Box 6733, "Military Science"). To learn more about John Barrett 1889, ask for his alumni file.
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