Kay Cottee Explained

Kay Cottee
Birth Date:1954 1, df=yes[1]
Birth Name:Kay McLaren
Nationality:Australian
Citizenship:Australian
Children:1

Kay Cottee (née McLaren, born 25 January 1954) is an Australian sailor, who was the first woman to perform a single-handed, non-stop and unassisted circumnavigation of the world. She performed this feat in 1988 in her yacht Blackmores First Lady, taking 189 days.

Personal life

Born Kay McLaren, the youngest of four daughters,[2] in Sydney on 25 January 1954, Cottee grew up in the southern Sydney suburb of Sans Souci.[3] She was born into a yachting family and was taken sailing for the first time when only a few weeks old.[4] For secondary schooling, she attended Moorefield Girls High School in Kogarah, New South Wales.[5]

Over the next nine years Cottee moved to Pittwater where she built a yacht and established a bareboat charter business.[3]

Cottee now lives in Yamba on the far NSW north coast with television producer husband Peter Sutton.[6] She is an international motivational speaker, boat builder,[7] writer, painter and sculptor.[8]

Solo circumnavigation

On 5 June 1988 at age 34, Cottee became the first woman to sail round the world alone non-stop and unassisted when she sailed through the heads of Sydney harbour. She was greeted by tens of thousands of well-wishers. Cottee had left the harbour 189 days earlier, on 29 November 1987.[9]

The historic voyage on her 37 ft yacht Blackmores First Lady[10] was also the fastest sailing trip around the world by a woman and the first solo, non-stop and unassisted voyage around the world by a woman.[11]

In the Southern Ocean, Cottee's boat was knocked down continuously and she was washed overboard.[12] [13] When Cottee rounded Cape Horn, the southernmost tip of South America, she celebrated with a lunch of crab, mayonnaise and self baked bread, and a bottle of Grange, a prestigious Australian wine.

Cottee and her major sponsor Blackmores Limited used the voyage to raise over $1M for the Rev. Ted Noffs' Life Education Program. Cottee also undertook an 18-month national schools tour, speaking to over 40,000 senior high school students, imparting the message you can achieve your dreams if you work steadily towards them.

Yacht building

In 2002 Cottee designed and built the first Kay Cottee 56,[14] a fibreglass/foam sandwich construction yacht designed as a bluewater cruiser.[15] With husband Peter Sutton, Cottee set up a boat building business near Yamba on the north coast of NSW in order to produce the yachts,[16] each one which would take an anticipated 8 months to build.

Awards

Since her round the world trip, Kay Cottee has received numerous accolades.

Other achievements

Australian National Maritime Museum

In 1991, Cottee joined the advisory board of the Australian National Maritime Museum.[22] She was chair of the museum from 1995 until 2001. In 2000, Blackmores First Lady, was acquired by the museum and placed on permanent display.[22]

Publications

Cottee is the author of two books. Her first book, First Lady, was published by Macmillan in 1989. Her second book, All at Sea on Land, was published by Pan Macmillan in 1998, about her life in the ten years since the voyage.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cottee, Kay AO. World Who's Who, Routledge Taylor & Francis Group. 22 February 2013.
  2. Web site: Brown . Malcolm . 2018-06-05 . First woman to sail solo non-stop around the world comes home . 2023-02-13 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  3. Web site: Kay Cottee AO . 2023-02-13 . The Australian Museum . en.
  4. Web site: Melbourne . The University of . She's Game: Women Making Australian Sporting History – Kay Cottee . 2023-02-13 . womenaustralia.info . en-gb.
  5. Web site: Tejszerski . Eva . 2012-05-22 . Set your course, says sailor . 2023-02-13 . St George & Sutherland Shire Leader . en-AU.
  6. Web site: Barlass . Tim . 2018-06-05 . Thirty years ago today – the kiss said it all . 2023-02-13 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  7. Web site: leviathan . 2007-10-04 . Kay Cottee 56 . 2023-02-13 . Yachting Mag . en-US.
  8. Web site: 28 November 2017 . 30 years ago today Kay Cottee set off around the world! . 14 February 2023 . Australian Sailing Hall of Fame.
  9. News: Australia hails woman-sailor for non-stop, solo world trip. 22 February 2013. Eugene Register-Guard. 6 June 1987.
  10. Web site: Blackmores First Lady . Australian National Maritime Museum . 22 February 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130427123837/http://www.anmm.gov.au/webdata/resources/pdfs/vessels/Blackmores_First_Lady.pdf . 27 April 2013 .
  11. Web site: Kay Cottee. Ovations. 22 February 2013. 26 September 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170926043744/https://www.ovations.com.au/speakers/kay-cottee.html. dead.
  12. Web site: Fearless Femmes. btcycle.com. 22 February 2013. 71. 28 July 2010.
  13. Web site: Sporting Oz Sailing- Kay Cottee. Dinkum Aussies. 22 February 2013. 1999.
  14. Web site: Kay Cottee 56 Review . 2023-02-26 . en.
  15. Web site: leviathan . 2007-10-04 . Kay Cottee 56 . 2023-02-26 . Yachting Mag . en-US.
  16. Web site: Kay Cottee 56 . 2023-02-26 . boatsales.com.au . en-AU.
  17. Book: Lewis, Wendy . Wendy Lewis . Australians of the Year . Pier 9 Press . 2010 . 978-1-74196-809-5 .
  18. http://www.australianoftheyear.org.au/recipients/?m=kay-cottee-1988 Australian of the Year – 1988
  19. Web site: Miss Kay Cottee. 2021-07-01. It's An Honour.
  20. Web site: First Lady. ABC Radio National. 22 February 2013. 14 October 2002.
  21. Web site: Kay Cottee inducted into the Australian Sailing Hall of Fame. Australian Sailing Hall of Fame website. 1 November 2017.
  22. News: Cornford . Phillip . Cottee sells First Lady to museum . 5 February 2000 . The Sydney Morning Herald . 15.