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Celebrated sailor Peter Warner killed in yacht capsize on NSW coast

One of Australia's most celebrated sailors has died after his yacht capsized in rough seas on the NSW North Coast this morning.
Peter Warner, 90, won three Sydney to Hobarts in the 1960s, but it was his rescue of marooned youngsters in the South Pacific that made him famous around the world.
Warner's yacht rolled on the incoming tide on the Ballina bar just before 9am today, throwing the 90-year-old and a teenager with him overboard.
Peter Warner in a recent photograph (left), and in 1960 (left in right image) with the commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club, Mr. D.M. Brown, preparing for the Sydney to Hobart.
Peter Warner in a recent photograph (left), and in 1960 (left in right image) with the commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club, Mr. D.M. Brown, preparing for the Sydney to Hobart. (Facebook/Nine Archives)
The 17-year-old managed to drag Warner to shore where a member of the public commenced CPR until paramedics arrived.
He died at the scene.
The teenage boy with him was uninjured.

A love of the sea

At just 17 Warner ran away from home and off to sea for a year, rebelling against joining the family business.
His father was Sir Arthur Warner, one of Australia's richest men of his day, and head of Astor Radio Corporation, the country's largest electronic manufacturing companies at the time.
As a teenager he returned home but fled again for another three years when he was just six weeks into a law degree.
Warner served in both the Swedish and Norwegian navies. He learned Swedish and sat for the exams to obtain a Swedish master's ticket.
Eventually, Warner came home and worked for his father for a few years, but the ocean was always calling.
He then spent 30 years living in Tonga and moving around the South Pacific.
Peter Warner with his crew (L-R) David, John, Peter Warner, Luke, Bill, Stephen, Jim Kolo and Mano. January 6, 1968.
Peter Warner with his crew (L-R) David, John, Peter Warner, Luke, Bill, Stephen, Jim Kolo and Mano. January 6, 1968. (John Raymond Elliott/Fairfax Media)

A historic rescue

In 1966, Warner discovered a group of shipwrecked Tongan teenagers who were stranded on an island for more than a year and presumed dead.
He was sailing his fishing boat Just David past the Tongan Island on 'Ata when he noticed burned patches of grass on the side of the island.
Six schoolboys had run away from their Catholic school, stolen a fishing boat, and then after eight days stranded at sea due to bad weather landed on the uninhabited island.
"The boys had set up a small commune with food garden, hollowed-out tree trunks to store rainwater, a gymnasium with curious weights, a badminton court, chicken pens and a permanent fire, all from handiwork, an old knife blade and much determination," he wrote in his memoir.

Three Sydney to Hobart wins

At the helm of his yacht Aston, Warner won line honours in three Sydney to Hobart races – in 1961, 1963, and 1964.
In 1962 he came second by just one minute.
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