# Rachel Barrett

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{{Short description|Welsh suffragette and newspaper editor 1874–1953}}
{{for|the soap opera character|List of Passions characters}}
{{good article}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2024}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2016}}
{{Infobox person
| name               = Rachel Barrett
| image              = Rachel Barrett - Suffragette.png
| caption            = Rachel Barrett
| birth_date         = 12 November 1874
| birth_place        = [Carmarthen](/source/Carmarthen), Carmarthenshire, Wales
| death_date         = {{death date and age|1953|08|26|1874|11|12|df=y}}
| death_place        = [Faygate](/source/Faygate), Sussex, England
| alma_mater         = [University College of Wales, Aberystwyth](/source/University_College_of_Wales%2C_Aberystwyth)
| occupation         = teacher<br/>political organiser<br/>editor
| organization       = [Women's Social and Political Union](/source/Women's_Social_and_Political_Union) (1906–1917/1918)<br/>[Women's Institute](/source/Women's_Institute) (1934–1948)
}}
'''Rachel Barrett''' (12 November 1874 – 26 August 1953) was a Welsh [suffragette](/source/suffragette) and newspaper editor born in [Carmarthen](/source/Carmarthen). Educated at the [University College of Wales](/source/Aberystwyth_University) in [Aberystwyth](/source/Aberystwyth) she became a science teacher, but quit her job in 1906 on hearing [Nellie Martel](/source/Nellie_Martel) speak of women's suffrage, joined the [Women's Social and Political Union](/source/Women's_Social_and_Political_Union) (WSPU) and moved to London. In 1907, she became a WSPU organiser, and after [Christabel Pankhurst](/source/Christabel_Pankhurst) fled to [Paris](/source/Paris), Barrett became joint organiser of the national WSPU campaign. In 1912, despite no journalistic background, she took charge of the new [newspaper](/source/newspaper) ''[The Suffragette](/source/The_Suffragette_(newspaper))''. Barrett was arrested on occasions for activities linked to the suffrage movement and, in 1913–1914, spent some time incognito to avoid re-arrest.

==Early life==
Barrett was born in [Carmarthen](/source/Carmarthen) on 12 November 1874<ref name=":1" /> to Rees Barrett, a land and road surveyor, and his second wife Anne Jones, both [Welsh-speakers](/source/Welsh_language).<ref name=":1" />{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref name="ODNB">{{Cite ODNB |id=63825 |title=Rachel Barrett |first=Caroline |last=Morrell}}</ref> She grew up in the town of [Llandeilo](/source/Llandeilo) with her elder brother Rees and a younger sister, Janette.<ref name="1881 Census">{{Cite web |url=https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKXK-CXS3 |title=Rachel Barrett: England and Wales Census, 1881|work=Familysearch.org|access-date=17 February 2016}}</ref> By the 1881 census, her mother Anne was the lone adult living at their address on Alan Road, her father having died in 1878.<ref name="1881 Census"/> Barrett was educated at Stratford Abbey School<ref name=":1" />, a boarding school in [Stroud](/source/Stroud), along with her sister, and won a scholarship to the [University College of Wales, Aberystwyth](/source/Aberystwyth_University).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} She graduated in 1904 with an external London [BSc degree](/source/Bachelor_of_Science) in mathematics and science.<ref name=":1" /> After graduating she became a science teacher and taught in [Llangefni](/source/Llangefni), Carmarthen and [Penarth](/source/Penarth).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}

==Life as a suffragette==
===Early activism with the WSPU===
Towards the end of 1906 Barrett attended a suffrage rally in [Cardiff](/source/Cardiff) and was inspired by a speech from [Nellie Martel](/source/Nellie_Martel) to join the [Women's Social and Political Union](/source/Women's_Social_and_Political_Union) (WSPU) at the end of the meeting.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} She felt "that they were doing the right and only thing" and thought that she herself "had always been a suffragist."<ref name=":0" /> By the following year Barrett was active as a WSPU activist and helped organise [Adela Pankhurst](/source/Adela_Pankhurst)'s meetings in Cardiff and [Barry](/source/Barry%2C_Wales) that year, sharing the stage with her as one of the speakers.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://newspapers.library.wales/view/4177363/4177365/8/rachel%20barrett%20AND%20vote |title=Suffragette Campaign|access-date=17 February 2016|date=6 June 1907|work=Evening Express}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://newspapers.library.wales/view/3804347/3804351/48/rachel%20barrett%20AND%20vote |title=Among the Suffragettes |access-date=17 February 2016 |date=21 June 1907 |work=Barry Herald}}</ref> Barrett spoke on behalf of the WSPU at many meetings, often in Welsh,{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=70}} which conflicted with her role as a schoolteacher as her [headmistress](/source/headmistress) disapproved of the publicity, especially after news of Barrett being flour-bombed with Adela Pankhurst<ref name=":0"/> at a rally in [Cardiff Docks](/source/Cardiff_Docks) made the local papers.<ref name="ODNB"/>

In July 1907, Barrett resigned as a teacher and enrolled at the [London School of Economics](/source/London_School_of_Economics) (LSE), near the WSPU headquarters at [Clement's Inn](/source/Inns_of_Chancery),<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0"/> intending to study economics and sociology and to work towards her [DSc](/source/Doctor_of_Science).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref name="ODNB"/> That August she was heavily active for the WSPU, campaigning at the [Bury St Edmunds by-election](/source/1907_Bury_St_Edmunds_by-election) with [Gladice Keevil](/source/Gladice_Keevil), [Nellie Martel](/source/Nellie_Martel), [Emmeline Pankhurst](/source/Emmeline_Pankhurst), [Aeta Lamb](/source/Aeta_Lamb) and [Elsa Gye](/source/Elsa_Gye).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} She influenced the American student [Alice Paul](/source/Alice_Paul), and both sold copies of ''Votes for Women''.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |title=Rise up, women!: the remarkable lives of the suffragettes |last=Atkinson |first=Diane |publisher=Bloomsbury |year=2018 |isbn=9781408844045 |location=London |pages=72,79,151, 212, 316, 397–8, 478 and 527 |oclc=1016848621|url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Rise_Up_Women/YwNbEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Rise+up,+women!:+the+remarkable+lives+of+the+suffragettes&printsec=frontcover}}</ref>

Barrett was also active with Adela Pankhurst at [Bradford](/source/Bradford). With her campaign activities over Barrett was free to attend the LSE, which proved useful for attending WSPU activities in nearby [Clement's Inn](/source/Clement's_Inn).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} Over the Christmas period Barrett was again busy campaigning for the WSPU, with Pankhurst, Martel, Lamb, and [Nellie Crocker](/source/Nellie_Crocker) at the "rough and boisterous" staunchly [Liberal](/source/Liberal_Party_(UK)) [Mid-Devon](/source/Mid_Devon) seat at [Newton Abbott](/source/Newton_Abbot_(UK_Parliament_constituency)),<ref name=":0"/> and next time in the lead up to the [Ashburton by-election](/source/1908_Ashburton_by-election).

Shortly afterwards Barrett was asked by [Christabel Pankhurst](/source/Christabel_Pankhurst) to become a full-time organiser of the WSPU, an offer which would see her leave her course at the LSE.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} Barrett regretted giving up her studies but accepted the position stating, "It was a definite call and I obeyed."{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref name="ODNB"/>

Barrett spent 1908 first organising a campaign in [Nottingham](/source/Nottingham) and then working on the by-elections in both [Dewsbury](/source/1908_Dewsbury_by-election) and [Dundee](/source/1908_Dundee_by-election){{sfn|Crawford|2003|p=35}} where she supported Scottish suffragette campaigners [Helen Fraser](/source/Helen_Fraser_(feminist)), [Elsa Gye](/source/Elsa_Gye) and [Mary Gawthorpe](/source/Mary_Gawthorpe). In June of that year she was the chair of one of the platforms at the [Hyde Park](/source/Hyde_Park%2C_London) rally,<ref name=":0"/> but the work took its toll on her health and shortly afterwards she was forced to temporarily step down from her position to recuperate, which included a period of time at a sanatorium.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} After recovering she moved closer to home, volunteering for [Annie Kenney](/source/Annie_Kenney) in [Bristol](/source/Bristol).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}} She soon agreed to resume her role as a paid organiser for he WSPU and was sent to [Newport](/source/Newport%2C_Wales) in south-east Wales to continue her duties.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://newspapers.library.wales/view/4214860/4214862/27/rachel%20barrett%20AND%20vote |title=Suffragette Policy |access-date=17 February 2016 |date=18 February 1910 |work=Evening Express}}</ref>

In 1910, Barrett was chosen to lead a group of women to talk to the [Chancellor of the Exchequer](/source/Chancellor_of_the_Exchequer), [David Lloyd George](/source/David_Lloyd_George), regarding the [Liberal Party](/source/Liberal_Party_(UK))'s role in supporting the first [Conciliation Bill](/source/Conciliation_Bills). The meeting lasted two and a half hours, and by its end she was convinced that Lloyd George had been insincere over his support for equal voting rights and believed him to be against women's suffrage.{{sfn|Crawford|2003|p=35}} By the end of the year her post was changed to organising all WSPU activities in Wales and she was relocated to the country's headquarters in Cardiff.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=35}}<ref name="ODNB"/> According to Ryland Wallace, writing in 2009, "No individual worked harder than Rachel Barrett to promote the campaign in Wales."{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=70}}

===Editor of ''The Suffragette''===
{{Quote box
|width = 27%
|align = right
|quote = "an exceptionally clever and highly educated woman, she was a devoted worker and had tremendous admiration for Christabel."
|source = – Annie Kenney's recollection of Barrett, ''Memories of a Militant'' (1924)
|style = padding:10px; background-color: #B0E0E6;
}}
In 1912, Barrett was selected by Kenney (who saw her as a 'highly-educated woman, a devoted worker'<ref name=":0" /> to help run the WPSU national campaign), following the raid by police on Clement's Inn and Christabel Pankhurst's subsequent flight to Paris.<ref name="ODNB"/> Barrett moved back to London and within a few months she was given the role of assistant editor of the WSPU newspaper, ''[The Suffragette](/source/The_Suffragette)'', on its launch in October 1912.<ref name="ODNB"/>{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=70}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Oldfield |first=Sybil |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/International_Woman_Suffrage_July_1913_O/IQ_klohZE9kC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=Rachel+Barrett+suffrage&dq=Rachel+Barrett+suffrage&printsec=frontcover |title=International Woman Suffrage: July 1913-October 1914 |date=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-25737-4 |pages=54 |language=en}}</ref> Writing in her autobiography Barrett described becoming an editor as "an appalling task as I knew nothing whatever of journalism".<ref name="ODNB"/> By taking on the job she also took on the risks connected with the increasingly militant WSPU.<ref name="ODNB"/> She travelled under cover to Paris to meet with Christabel Pankhurst, and when speaking to her on the phone she recalled how she "could always hear the click of [Scotland Yard](/source/Scotland_Yard) listening in."<ref name="ODNB"/>{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=70}}

[[File:Emmeline Pankhurst statue on podium Victoria Tower Gardens.jpg|thumb|left|upright|The [statue of Emmeline Pankhurst](/source/Emmeline_and_Christabel_Pankhurst_Memorial) in Westminster. Barrett played a key role in raising the funds to erect this memorial]]
Over the next two years, Barrett was a key figure in keeping the newspaper in print despite the [Home Secretary](/source/Home_Secretary)'s efforts to suppress it.{{sfn|Wallace|2009|p=70}} In April 1913, the offices of ''The Suffragette'' were raided by the police and Barrett, [Beatrice Sanders](/source/Beatrice_Sanders), [Agnes Lake](/source/Agnes_Lake), [Harriet Kerr](/source/Harriet_Kerr) and [Flora Drummond](/source/Flora_Drummond) were arrested on charges of conspiring to damage property.<ref name="ODNB"/><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://newspapers.library.wales/view/4424841/4424849/141/Rachel%20Barrett |title=Suffragettes: Accused Again Brought Before Magistrate |date=18 June 1913 |access-date=19 February 2016 |work=The Cambria Daily Reader}}</ref> Barrett was sentenced to nine months' imprisonment at [Holloway](/source/HM_Prison_Holloway).{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://newspapers.library.wales/view/4425138/4425146/105/Rachel%20Barrett%20AND%20suffragette |title=Sent to Prison: Suffragette Leaders Found Guilty of Conspiracy |date=13 May 1913 |access-date=19 February 2016|work=The Cambria Daily Reader}}</ref> She immediately went on hunger strike, was transferred to [Canterbury Prison](/source/HM_Prison_Canterbury), and after five days she was released under the "[Cat and Mouse Act](/source/Cat_and_Mouse_Act)".{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} She moved into "Mouse Castle", [2 Campden Hill Square](/source/Campden_Hill), home of the Brackenbury family who were sympathetic suffragists.<ref name=":0"/>{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} After three weeks at the house, Barrett emerged and was rearrested. She went back on hunger strike and after four days was again released to "Mouse Castle".{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} This time, she was smuggled out of the house in disguise to allow her to speak at meetings, before being rearrested for a second time{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} and was looked after by her friend [I. A. R. Wylie](/source/I._A._R._Wylie) at St John's Wood, known as the "Mouse Hole"<ref name=":0"/> and for the third time, Barrett was released after a hunger strike, but this time, she successfully eluded the authorities and fled to a [nursing home](/source/nursing_home) in [Edinburgh](/source/Edinburgh) where she remained until December 1913.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} On leaving [Scotland](/source/Scotland), she returned in secret to London; she hid at Lincoln's Inn House where she lived in a [bed-sitting room](/source/bedsit) there,{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} only getting air on the roof.<ref name=":0"/>

Barrett continued to edit ''The Suffragette'', but she travelled to Paris to discuss the future of the newspaper with Christabel Pankhurst after its offices were raided in May 1914.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} The result of their meeting was the relocation of ''The Suffragette'' to Edinburgh where the printers were at less risk of arrest. Barrett moved to Edinburgh with [Ida Wylie](/source/I._A._R._Wylie) and assumed the pseudonym "Miss Ashworth".<ref name="ODNB"/>{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} Barrett continued to publish the paper until its final edition on the week after the [First World War](/source/First_World_War) was declared.<ref name="ODNB"/> During the war, Barrett was a vocal supporter of British military action, as were the majority of the suffragette movement.{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=229}} She was a contributor to the WSPU 'Victory Fund' which was launched in 1916 to sponsor campaigns against "a compromise peace" and industrial strikes.{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=229}}

After the passing of the [Representation of the People Act 1918](/source/Representation_of_the_People_Act_1918), in which some women within the United Kingdom were first given the right to vote, Barrett busied herself in continuing the fight for full emancipation. When [full voting rights were won in 1928](/source/Representation_of_the_People_(Equal_Franchise)_Act_1928), she helped raise funds for commemorations and was an important figure in raising the money needed to erect a [statue](/source/Emmeline_and_Christabel_Pankhurst_Memorial) of Emmeline Pankhurst in [Victoria Tower Gardens](/source/Victoria_Tower_Gardens), near the [Palace of Westminster](/source/Palace_of_Westminster) in London.{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=291}} Barrett understood the international connections of suffrage and contacted important Canadian and American campaigners for financial support.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Emmeline Pankhurst: A Biography |first=June |last=Purvis |author-link=June Purvis |year=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781134341924 |page=355}}</ref> In Barrett's obituary in the ''Women's Bulletin'', it read that the raising of the statue "...stands as a permanent memorial to Rachel's organising ability."{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |p=291}} In 1929, Barrett was appointed secretary of the Equal Political Rights Campaign Committee, an organisation that sought equality between men and women in all political spheres.{{sfn |Wallace |2009 |pp=292–293}}

==Later life==
In her later life, Barrett joined [the Suffragette Fellowship](/source/the_Suffragette_Fellowship) with [Edith How-Martyn](/source/Edith_How-Martyn)<ref name=":0"/> and was particularly close to [Kitty Marshall](/source/Katherine_%22Kitty%22_Marshall) who lived near by.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} She attempted to publish a memoir of Marshall in the late 1940s, but it was turned down for publication.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}} Barrett moved to [Sible Hedingham](/source/Sible_Hedingham) in Essex in the early 1930s and joined the Sible Hedingham [Women's Institute](/source/Women's_Institute) in 1934, remaining a member until 1948.<ref name="Day">{{Cite web |url=http://www.siblehedingham.com/houses.htm |title=Historic Houses In Sible Hedingham |first=Pauline |last=Day |work=siblehedingham.com |access-date=19 February 2016 |archive-date=11 May 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150511115141/http://www.siblehedingham.com/houses.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> There she lived at Lamb Cottage.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}}

==Relationship with I. A. R. Wylie==
thumb|right|I. A. R. Wylie in 1921, during her time with Barrett
During her time editing ''The Suffragette'', Barrett struck up a lesbian relationship with the female Australian author I. A. R. Wylie, who contributed to the paper in 1913.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Cline |first=Sally |url=http://archive.org/details/radclyffehallwom0000clin |title=Radclyffe Hall : a woman called John |date=1998 |publisher=Woodstock, NY : Overlook Press |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-87951-831-8 |pages=172}}</ref><ref name="ODNB"/><ref>{{Cite book |last=Hamer |url=http://archive.org/details/emily-hamer-britannias-glory-a-history-of-twentieth-century-lesbians-bloomsbury-academic-2016 |title=Britannia’s Glory: A History of Twentieth-Century Lesbians |date=2016 |publisher=Bloomsbury |pages=99|first=Emily}}</ref>{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rouse |first=Wendy L. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.4493311 |title=Public Faces, Secret Lives: A Queer History of the Women's Suffrage Movement |date=2022 |publisher=NYU Press |pages=66, 93}}</ref> In 1919, Barrett and Wylie travelled to the United States, where they bought a car and spent over a year travelling round the country. They stayed in New York and San Francisco and were recorded in the 1920 census as living in [Carmel-By-The-Sea](/source/Carmel-by-the-Sea%2C_California) in California, where Wylie was classed as the head of the household and Barrett as her friend.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://neglectedbooks.com/?p=1379 |title=My Life with George: An Unconventional Autobiography, by I. A. R. Wylie |date=27 May 2012 |access-date=19 February 2016 |work=neglectedbooks.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MH7G-TQQ |title=Rachel Barrett: United States Census, 1920 |year=1920 |access-date=19 February 2016 |work=familysearch.org}}</ref>

The two women remained close for some time and, in 1928, were supporters of their close friends [Una Troubridge](/source/Una_Vincenzo%2C_Lady_Troubridge) and [Radclyffe Hall](/source/Radclyffe_Hall) during the trial of ''[The Well of Loneliness](/source/The_Well_of_Loneliness)''.<ref name="ODNB"/>{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}}<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last=Thorley |first=Mary |date=2021-07-29 |title=BARRETT, RACHEL (1874 - 1953), suffragette |url=https://biography.wales/article/s12-BARR-RAC-1874 |access-date=2025-10-24 |website=Dictionary of Welsh Biography}}</ref> When Barrett died, she left the residue of her estate to Wylie.{{sfn |Crawford |2003 |p=36}}

==Death==
Barrett died of a [cerebral haemorrhage](/source/cerebral_haemorrhage) on 26 August 1953 at the Carylls Nursing Home in [Faygate](/source/Faygate), [Sussex](/source/Sussex). She was 78 years old.<ref name="ODNB"/> She left Lamb Cottage to her niece Gwyneth Anderson, who lived there with her husband, the British poet, [J. Redwood Anderson](/source/J._Redwood_Anderson).<ref name="Day"/>

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Primary sources==
*{{Cite book |editor1-last=John |editor1-first=Angela V. |last1=Cook |first1=Kay |last2=Evans |first2=Neil |title=Our Mothers' Land, Chapters in Welsh Women's History 1830–1939 |chapter='The Petty Antics of the Bell-Ringing Boisterous Band'? The Women's Suffrage Movement in Wales, 1890–1918 |year=1991 |publisher=University of Wales Press |location=Cardiff |isbn=0-7083-1129-6}}
*{{Cite book |last=Crawford |first=Elizabeth |author-link=Elizabeth Crawford (historian) |title=The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866–1928 |year=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781135434021}}
*{{Cite book |editor1-last=John |editor1-first=Angela V. |last=John |first=Angela V. |title=Our Mothers' Land, Chapters in Welsh Women's History 1830–1939 |chapter=Beyond Paternalism: The Ironmaster's Wife in the Industrial Community |year=1991 |publisher=University of Wales Press |location=Cardiff |isbn=0-7083-1129-6}}
*{{Cite book |last=Wallace |first=Ryland |year=2009 |title=The Women's Suffrage Movement in Wales, 1866–1928 |location=Cardiff |publisher=[University of Wales Press](/source/University_of_Wales_Press) |isbn=978-0-708-32173-7}}

==Further reading==
*{{Cite book |last=Cline |first=Sally |title=Radclyffe Hall: A Woman Called John |year=1999 |publisher=The Overlook Press |isbn=978-0879517083 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/radclyffehallwom0000clin}}
*{{Cite book |last=Wylie |first=I. A. R. |title=My Life with George: An Unconventional Autobiography |year=2010 |publisher=Kessinger Publishing |isbn=978-1163188477}}

{{Suffrage}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Barrett, Rachel}}
Category:1874 births
Category:1953 deaths
Category:19th-century Welsh LGBTQ people
Category:19th-century Welsh women educators
Category:19th-century Welsh educators
Category:19th-century Welsh women writers
Category:20th-century Welsh journalists
Category:20th-century Welsh LGBTQ people
Category:20th-century Welsh educators
Category:20th-century Welsh writers
Category:20th-century Welsh women writers
Category:Welsh autobiographers
Category:Welsh feminists
Category:Welsh suffragists
Category:Welsh women editors
Category:Welsh newspaper editors
Category:British women newspaper editors
Category:Alumni of Aberystwyth University
Category:Alumni of the London School of Economics
Category:People from Carmarthen
Category:Welsh LGBTQ journalists
Category:People from Sible Hedingham
Category:Women's Social and Political Union
Category:Science teachers
Category:British women autobiographers
Category:British women civil rights activists
Category:20th-century British newspaper editors

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Rachel Barrett](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rachel_Barrett) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rachel_Barrett?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
