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KARALEE  off Sydney Heads in 2008
Karalee
KARALEE  off Sydney Heads in 2008
KARALEE off Sydney Heads in 2008
Privat Collection

Karalee

Vessel numberHV000293
Sail Number170
Previous Number17
Designer (1921 - 1995)
Date1952
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 13.72 m x 9.75 m x 2.97 m x 2.06 m, 11.81 tonnes (45 ft x 32 ft x 9.75 ft x 6.75 ft, 12 tons)
DescriptionKARALEE was built for Tom Mulhearn in Sydney by Reg and Cyril Morrow at their Balmain yard. Mulhearn had initially asked his friend Neville Chidgey to design the boat, but Chidgey said his colleague in the drafting office at Cockatoo Island, Alan Payne, would do a better job. Mulhearn planned to call the boat KARALEE, an Aboriginal word for wild flower and the name of Mulhearn's timber yard in Dorrigo. During the design process Payne entered the plans in an international design competition, but misunderstood the name and sent it in as KILLARA. The design came third, behind winner Philip Rhodes, a US designer. Shortly after launching, when being entered for its first race, Mulhearn had a sudden change of mind, and the yacht was listed as MARGARET M, after his wife.

KARALEE has the classic style and long overhangs that were typical for many yachts of that period, influenced by the International Rule's 6, 8 and 12 metre Classes. Although not designed to that rule, KARALEE is one of many yachts sometimes referred to as an English cruising 8 Metre. Seacraft magazine quoted Alan Payne describing it in October 1957 as a 'conventional English type’. KARALEE's design was developed from another yacht designed by Payne called MOONYA, which raced successfully on the east coast for many years, and the two designs helped establish his career early in the 1950s.

The hull was planked in timber from Mulhearns yard; white beech on spotted gum frames. It was carefully engineered by the designer, assisted by Neville Chidgey. An interesting feature, showing how Payne adopted unorthodox features from early in his career, was a highfield lever located on the foredeck to tension the forestay. The lever was placed aft of a sheave which the forestay passed around, running back along the deck to the lever. The lever was removed by KARALEE's second owner when the relatively flexible galvanised steel forestay was replaced by much stiffer stainless steel.

KARALEE remained with Mulhearn until 1988 when it was sold to its present owner. Hearing the saga of the name changes, the present owner asked Mulhearn if he could return it to the original name KARALEE. As Margaret Mulhearn had died, Tom Mulhearn agreed to the change of name, back to his original choice.

The yacht retains all of its original structure and configuration except for an aluminium spar that replaced the wooden mast in 1970. The present owner has made one small but significant revision. He replaced the original port lights from 1952 with new oval port lights, and these new castings matched the shape drawn by Alan Payne on his plans for the yacht.
SignificanceKARALEE is wooden cruising and racing yacht built in NSW in the early 1950s. It is an early example of a classic harbour cruising yacht from the prominent naval architect Alan Payne. Designed in the late 1940s, launched in 1952, it has had a long association with Sydney Harbour under only two owners.
QUESTING on its trial sail after being restored by Sydney Wooden Boats in 2015/16
Andrew Riddell
1949
Skirmish
Bluey Williams
1969
On Lake Alexandrina in 1887-89
Willans and Robinson
1884
SKERRY OF KURRABA and its big spinnaker, which could be carried quite shy.
Knud Reimers
1958
Vivienne Marie
Hald & Johansen
1965
MERCEDES III on Port Phillip around 2011
Cec Quilkey
1966
CHERUB sailing in 2009 with its restored gaff rig
CAM Fisher and Sons
1948
GRETEL in Italy in 2003
Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd
1962
BENICIA under its schooner rig on the Derwent River, 1938.
John Alden
1935
Adina
Percy Coverdale
1932
SIRIUS on Sydney Harbour in the 1930s or 1940s
J D Thistlethwaite
1935
GRETEL II at the 2010 Classic and Wooden Boat Festival at the ANMM
Bill Barnett (1915-2018)
1970