John W. Garrett was an American diplomat.
Background
John Work Garrett, the grandson of Baltimore and Ohio Railroad President and banker John W. Garrett was born in Baltimore, Maryland on May 19, 1872. His uncle Robert Garrett also served as President of the B & O, and his father Thomas Harrison Garrett operated the family"s bank in Baltimore.
Education
The younger John West. Garrett graduated from Princeton University in 1895 and began a career at the bank owned by his family.
Career
His postings included Minister to Venezuela, Argentina, and the Netherlands, and Ambassador to Italy. In 1901 Garrett embarked on a diplomatic career with appointment as Secretary of the United States legation at The Hague. In 1905 he transferred to a similar position in Berlin, and in 1908 another transfer brought him to Rome.
Garrett was appointed Minister to Venezuela in 1910 and served until 1911, when he was appointed as Minister to Argentina.
In 1914 Garrett left Argentina when he was appointed as a special assistant to the Ambassador to France. He served in this post until 1917.
As an American diplomat in Europe during World War I, Garrett took part in commissions and conferences on the handling of prisoners of war and other war-related issues. From 1917 to 1919 Garrett served as Minister to the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
Originally a Democrat, Garrett later became a Republican and served as a Delegate to the 1920 Republican National Convention.
In 1922 he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination for United States. Senator, losing to incumbent Joseph I. France. (France went on to lose the general election to William Cabell Bruce). In 1924 he was again a Delegate to the Republican National Convention.
Garrett served as Ambassador to Italy from 1929 to 1933.
In retirement Garrett resided at Evergreen, the Garrett family mansion which is now a museum and library of the Johns Hopkins University. Garrett died in Baltimore on June 26, 1942, and is buried in Baltimore"s Green Mount Cemetery.
John Work Garrett and several of his family members were well known collectors of rare books and manuscripts, coins and other items. He donated his papers and much of his library to Johns Hopkins University, and many of his other items are still bought and sold by collectors.
Politics
Republican Party, Democratic Party.