Barrett had his American debut in Boston on 28 December 1796, playing the role of Ranger in
The Suspicious Husband (a 1747 play by
Benjamin Hoadly). He first appeared in New York at the
John Street Theatre in August 1797, playing the role of Don Felix in
The Wonder (a 1714 play by
Susanna Centlivre). He managed the
Federal Street Theatre in Boston circa 1798 until it was destroyed by a fire in February 1798. He briefly returned to managing the theater in 1799 after it was rebuilt, but the season was not a success. In late 1798, Barrett wrote to U.S. President
John Adams for assistance. Barrett notes therein that Adams had seen him perform the role of
General Warren in
Bunker-Hill, a 1797 play by
John Daly Burk, and was "induced to hope, my humble exertions may still Live in Your Memory." Barrett also reports in his letter to Adams that he had been forced to " support my family by the exertion of my talents in the Science of defence"; Barrett was an accomplished fencer. Barrett died in Boston on 18 November 1809 at age 65. His second wife ("Mrs. Barrett") was also an actor and died in Boston in 1832. Their son George Barrett was also an actor. ==References==