John Alton “Jack” Barrett, 88, Prudence Island

Posted 10/16/17

John Alton “Jack” Barrett, 88 years young, bid farewell to life and the family he loved beyond measure with a bittersweet, raspy, raucous kind of laugh, and a “let me go, I’ve …

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John Alton “Jack” Barrett, 88, Prudence Island

Posted

John Alton “Jack” Barrett, 88 years young, bid farewell to life and the family he loved beyond measure with a bittersweet, raspy, raucous kind of laugh, and a “let me go, I’ve had a good life” and “I love you all” declaration from his lips. Jack would tell you that “Life is so precious” and “God is Love.” He died of complications of old age on Monday, Oct. 9, 2017, in Overlook Hospice. He will be deeply missed!

He was born in New Rochelle, N.Y. on May 17, 1929, the son of Alton Herbert and Gladys Leila (Walch) Barrett. He was predeceased by four brothers and one sister: Raymond W. Farnum, Arthur Bates Barrett, Horace Mitchell “Bud” Barrett, Daniel Lincoln Barrett, and an infant sister Ruth. He was deeply influenced by his relationship to his maternal grandparents, Horace H. “Buddy” Walch and Winifred E. (Bates) Walch. 

He instilled in our family a love for life, respect for our fellow man, a mischievous twinkle in the eye, an appreciation for poetry, history, and YES ~ POLITICS ( Ugh! & a LOL!), that freedom is not free, self-reliance and work ethic are good qualities, and to have never ending HOPE! 

Jack was a man of great wisdom, a deeply spiritual man with a magnificent loving heart and incredibly brilliant mind. He lived life with gusto, had great humor, laughed often, and loved well. He had a deep love for his wife Vada, saying, “We had something really special, your mother and I.” He was always young at heart and would tell us, “Growing old is mandatory, growing up is optional.”

He leaves his loving wife of 63 years, Vada Mae (Eggers) Barrett; three children, Sharon Pelletier and Katherine Barrett of Webster and his son Alton Barrett of Prudence Island, R.I.; five grandchildren, Kyle and Tyler Bennett, Michaela and Desiree Pelletier and Aribella Barrett; three great-grandchildren, Sakaya “from Hawaii” Bennett, Oliver “the Genius” Bennett and Cooper “Super Duper” Bennett.

He leaves in-laws and outlaws he loved dearly: Bryan P. Pelletier, Gary E. Bennett (recently deceased loving father of the Bennett Boys), Debra Henault, Mary Ellen “Mimi” and Juliana Henault (long-time companion of Alton and her children), Sutton Tucker Bennett (wife of Kyle), and Dr. Jillian Reed Bennett (wife of Tyler), and his remaining sisters-in-law from Forest Va.: Mattie (Eggers) Droog and Helen (Eggers) Davidson; and his many predeceased brothers and sisters in-law. 

He had a special place in his heart for his nieces and nephews, their husbands, wives, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, from New England to Virginia and beyond!

Jack thoroughly enjoyed many a Barrett Family Fun Day in August at Prudence Island, R.I., Barrett winter snow skiing trips to King Pine in New Hampshire, Eggers Family Reunions in the mountains of North Carolina and family trips to Virginia. Times treasured and fondly remembered. 

Jack’s father worked for Standard Oil Co. and the family traveled extensively. Jack lived many places in his first 17 years, including: Aruba as a young boy with oil tanker trips to the states, destination Webster, Mass. and Prudence Island, R.I. to visit his grandparents; the Admiral Farragut Academy in Pine Beach, N.J., Saint Andrews School in Barrington, R.I., to Oakridge, Tenn., New York, Chicago, Michigan and more. 

He proudly served our great nation in the U.S. Navy from 1946 to 1952. He enlisted at 17 years old from Newport, R.I. He did his basic training in the Great Lakes, Chicago, Ill., where he set out hitchhiking with a friend along Route 66 to report for duty in San Francisco, Calif. He served in Kodiak and the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, the Mediterranean and beyond! Many a great story has been told of his adventures, and some kept quiet, only hinted to by the scar of a serious head injury and the arm tattoo of a skull and banner with the words “Death before Dishonor.”

Upon discharge, he tried his hand at raising beef cattle with his brother Bud on a farm in Concord, Vt. Relatively short-lived, he soon moved to Lynchburg, Va., where he met the love of his life Vada, who followed him back to Webster where he finally settled down to raise their family. 

in the early 1960s, Jack ran an outdoor ice skating arena in Webster on the corner of Thompson and Birch Island roads, but due to an ultimatum and a proposed promotion from his full time employer (BW Footwear), he gave up his beloved freedom to settle down and work in manufacturing. He was an entrepreneur at heart, a leader with great problem-solving skills, a Jack of all trades, and founder of his own manufacturing firm, Barrett Stitching Co., in 1975. 

In around 1990, after retirement, he created Jack’s Hope Realty on Prudence Island, R.I. As owner, broker of his own real estate sales company, and with the help of his friend and fellow agent, Sam Cambria, they were able to share the dream of vacation home ownership with other Prudence Island enthusiasts for many years! Jack excelled at whatever he put his mind to! 

He was a physical kind of guy and loved to swim, sail, ice skate, play ice hockey, touch football, softball, run, snow ski, and enjoyed raking leaves on a windy fall day (to the chagrin of our neighbors, LOL). Captain Jack, the old salt, would take the land-loving Vada and grandchildren on expeditions in Narragansett Bay on his Sports Fisherman boat and would teach the grandchildren how to hold the helm from the fly bridge. 

They often joyfully played and ate at Rocky Point Park, welcomed the Tall Ships to Newport a time or two, explored and camped on Prudence and Dutch islands! In later years, he thoroughly enjoyed winters in Southwest Florida. He enjoyed walking the boardwalk at Englewood beach, the sunsets at Manasota beach and the lighthouse at Boca Grande. He was tech savvy and an avid Ancestry.com guru, who let us know our heritage, firmly planting our roots in the rich soil of our loving past some-ones! We are grateful for his great legacy, and his very own incredible penned poetry! Farewell and enjoy the Tide Dad, Grampa, Uncle Jack! See You Soon!

Visitation was held Sunday, Oct. 15, 2017 in Scanlon Funeral Service, 38 East Main St., followed by a service at the funeral home. The Reverend John R. White officiated. A graveside service was held Monday, Oct. 16, in Mount Zion Cemetery, Worcester Road, Webster. The Webster-Dudley Veterans Council performed military honors. 

Donations in his name may be made to the Disabled American Veterans, at: DAV, 24 Beacon St, Suite 546 Statehouse, Boston, MA 02133. For more information on local DAV services to veterans, please visit www.DAVMA.org.

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