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Gazetteer
Barnett, MO -- U.S. city in Missouri
Population (2000): 207
Housing Units (2000): 88
Land area (2000): 0.273226 sq. miles (0.707653 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.273226 sq. miles (0.707653 sq. km)
FIPS code: 03376
Located within: Missouri (MO), FIPS 29
Location: 38.377061 N, 92.674708 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 65011
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Barnett, MO
Barnett
Wikipedia
Barnett

Barnett is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:

Surname:

  • Brett Barnett, director and co-writer of webseries Shadazzle
  • Charlene Barnett (1928–1979), All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player
  • Charlie Barnett (disambiguation)
  • Colin Barnett (born 1950), the Premier of Western Australia
  • Correlli Barnett (born 1927), English military historian
  • Denis Barnett (1906–1992), British air marshal
  • Errol Barnett (born 1983), American news anchor and correspondent
  • Frank Barnett (1933-2016), 49th Governor of American Samoa
  • Gary Barnett (born 1946), American football coach
  • Guy Barnett (born 1962), Australian politician
  • Guy Barnett (1928–1986), British politician
  • Harvey Barnett (1925–1995), Australian intelligence officer
  • James Barnett (disambiguation)
  • Joel Barnett, Baron Barnett (1923–2014), British politician
  • John Barnett (disambiguation)
  • Josh Barnett (born 1977), American heavyweight mixed martial arts fighter
  • Ken Barnett (born 1951), Texas radio personality. Texas Radio Hall of Fame inductee.
  • Leon Barnett (born 1985), English professional football player
  • Lincoln Barnett, (1909–1979), American editor and writer
  • Louis Barnett (born 1991), British chocolatier
  • Nick Barnett (born 1981), American professional football player
  • Phillip Barnett (born 1990), American football player
  • Randy Barnett (born 1952), American libertarian legal theorist
  • Ross Barnett (1898–1987), 56th Governor of Mississippi
  • Richard Barnett (disambiguation)
  • Samuel Augustus Barnett (1844–1913), an English clergyman and reformer
  • Samuel Jackson Barnett (1873–1956), American physicist, discoverer of the Barnett effect
  • Samuel Barnett (actor) (born 1980), English actor
  • Stacy Barnett, murder victim in the Murder of John Goosey and Stacy Barnett
  • Steven Barnett (born 1943), American water polo player
  • Steven Barnett (born 1979), Australian diver
  • Thomas Barnett (disambiguation)
  • William P. Barnett (born 1958), American organizational theorist

Given name:

  • Barnett Newman (1905–1970), American artist
  • Barnett Slepian (1946–1998), American physician and murder victim
  • Barnett Rosenberg (1926–2009), American chemist, discoverer of the anti-tumour effects of cisplatin

Usage examples of "barnett".

If he could pull this off, Barnett would be anointed by segregationist multitudes as virtually the Second Coming of Christ, as both peacemaker and conqueror.

On the surface, Governor Barnett ruled a lush and tranquil land blanketed with luxuriant forests of virgin pines, tupelo, sycamore, persimmon, magnolia, holly, sweet gum, and hickory, from gentle foothills in the north to cypress swamps curtained with Spanish moss and Gulf Coast resorts in the south.

As a boy in Leake County, Barnett would sit on the porch under a chinaberry tree and listen to his father, John William Barnett, tell tales of his years as a Confederate soldier, witnessing the siege of Vicksburg, having his horse shot out from under him at the Battle of Shilo, and seeing his own father, Captain John Henry Barnett, return home from four years in the Confederate army in clothes riddled by Union gunfire.

As a young man, Barnett built up his savings in an old coffee can on a cupboard shelf by picking cotton stalks as a field hand, working as a schoolhouse janitor, operating an outdoor barbershop, and organizing a fourteen-piece brass band that played county fairs across the state, with Barnett playing the French horn.

In the summertime, to pay his college expenses, Barnett rode buses and trains through Alabama and Mississippi as a door-to-door salesman for Wearever aluminum products, dragging a pair of huge sample cases that held seventy-two pounds of cooking utensils, pots, and pans.

After graduating from the University of Mississippi law school, Barnett built up one of the biggest and most profitable law firms in the state, specializing in personal-injury damage suits against corporations.

In 1959, on his third try for governor, Barnett was elected to lead the poorest state in the nation.

On the campaign trail, Barnett was transformed from a kindly grandfather figure into a zealot of scorching defiance and ferocity.

In a news film of the speech, as Barnett roars, you can almost feel the paint on the walls melt.

But Ross Barnett was heir to a political tradition that often cursed Mississippi with leaders of neolithic racism and appalling backwardness.

As a result, hundreds of citizens lined up every day to see Barnett, and he took special joy in parading schoolchildren into his office to shake his hand, sometimes 150 at a time.

On the subject of race, it was Bill Simmons, not Ross Barnett, who ruled Mississippi.

AMERICAN INSURRECTION Like Ross Barnett, Citizens Council chief William Simmons was a child of the Confederacy.

Even Walter Cronkite was saying on TV late that night the Kennedy-Nixon battle was so tight that it could come down to the eight electoral votes controlled by Governor Barnett to decide the presidency.

As his advisers debated the options, Ross Barnett revealed two weaknesses that are common to politicians, but 64AN AMERICAN INSURRECTION would prove potentially disastrous in this crisis: He wanted everyone to love him, and he constantly changed his mind.