,
Huntingdonshire, the former seat of the Dukes of Manchester In addition to the family estates inherited from his father, in 1910, he inherited the lease of his mother's townhouse at 5
Grosvenor Square, Mayfair. 's yacht In 1911 he bought a
steam yacht,
Conqueror, from
Frederick William Vanderbilt. In 1914 he and his then wife were guests aboard Vanderbilt's steam yacht when it ran aground in a heavy sea on the
Caribbean coast of
Colombia. The yacht could not be refloated, and the Vanderbilts and the Manchesters were rescued the next day by a
steamship. Manchester was a notorious spendthrift, and as a result of the excessive spending by him and the prior two Dukes, the family's fortune, which was already low, was completely exhausted and culminated in the sale of the family's lands during the tenure of the tenth Duke. He spent much of his life abroad, evading creditors, seeking out wealthy consorts, and attempting to extract money from wealthy acquaintances. He is perhaps most well known in America from the leading case of
Hamilton v. Drogo, which concerned the establishment of a
spendthrift trust for the benefit of the young Duke. In 1935, the Duke was sentenced to nine months in
HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs for
false pretences, having made false statements to a pawnbroker to receive cash. ==Personal life==