In 1949, he and his wife, Margaret McKean Read, daughter of Margarett Sargent, moved to Saracen Farm in Ipswich, Massachusetts. From 1953 to 1955 he was a member of the Ipswich Board of Selectmen. In 1954 he was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. He resigned from the House in 1959 amid a public scandal surrounding his marriage.[4]
Sailing
After his resignation, Warburton settled in Newport, Rhode Island. In 1967, he founded the Black Pearl Restaurant, named after his yacht.[5] In 1970 he married Lore M. Faught. In 1972, Warburton sailed to England for the international sail training races from Cowes to Kiel. Afterwards, Warburton set out to create an American sailing organization similar to the international one that organized that race. This led to him and some of his fellow sailing enthusiasts in Newport to found the American Sail Training Association. In 1976 the American Sail Training Association brought 100 Tall Ships to Newport, Philadelphia and Boston to celebrate the American bicentennial.[4]
Death
Warburton died on May 1, 1983, at the age of 61.[1]
^ ab"Barclay Warburton 3rd Dies; Founder Of 'Tall Ships' Group". The New York Times. May 5, 1983. Retrieved 2011-05-22. Barclay H. Warburton 3d, founder of the American Sail Training Association, which was the host for the 'tall ships' visit to New York in 1976 in honor of the nation's bicentennial celebration died Sunday at his home in Newport, R.I. He was 61 years old. He had a lifelong love of the sea, and after participating in Europe in the 1972 International Sail Training Races, he arranged to bring the sailing ships to Philadelphia and Newport, and last year, to Lisbon. Mr. Warburton graduated from Harvard in 1948 and was later elected to the Massachusetts Legislature. He settled in Newport and, in 1967, founded the Black Pearl restaurant there. He is survived by five children, Barclay H. 4th of Washington, D.C., Minnie of Annapolis, MD, Miranda of Pullman, Wash., and Rosemary W. Hardisty and Peter L., both of Newport.
^"Estate Turned Over to Public by Ipswich Kin of Vanderbilt". The Boston Daily Globe. August 14, 1949.
^ abc"Barclay Warburton 3D, Ex-Legislator; His Group Brought Tall Ships to Boston". The Boston Globe. May 4, 1983.
^"A wealth of delight". Boston Globe. November 15, 2006. Retrieved 2011-05-29. Sailors try to tie up as close to Bannister's Wharf as they can, so that they can get a table at the Black Pearl (Bannister's Wharf, 200 Broadway, 401-846-5264, blackpearlnewport.com , entrees $14.50-$25) and order the clam chowder or other seafood specialties. Named after yachtsman Barclay Warburton III's brigantine rig and fitted with the restaurant equivalent of polished brass and well-oiled teak, the place feels like the inside of an old yacht.