Duke of Westminster's son to inherit £8.3bn fortune

THE 25-year-old son of billionaire landowner the Duke of Westminster will inherit the family estate and an £8.3 billion fortune after his father died suddenly.

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The Duke of Westminster pictured alongside Queen Elizabeth attending the wedding of Ed Van Cutsem and Lady Tamara Grosvenor in 2004. Picture: GettyThe Duke of Westminster pictured alongside Queen Elizabeth attending the wedding of Ed Van Cutsem and Lady Tamara Grosvenor in 2004. Picture: Getty
The Duke of Westminster pictured alongside Queen Elizabeth attending the wedding of Ed Van Cutsem and Lady Tamara Grosvenor in 2004. Picture: Getty

Hugh Grosvenor is the only son of Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor, who died on Tuesday afternoon after being transferred from his Abbeystead Estate to the Royal Preston Hospital in Lancashire.

A spokeswoman for the family said the cause of death is not yet known.

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The 64-year-old father of four was said to be worth around 10.8 billion dollars (£8.3 billion), according to Forbes, making him the 68th richest person in the world, and third in the UK.

Close friends the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall have said they are “deeply shocked and greatly saddened” by his sudden death, a Clarence House spokeswoman said.

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The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh will also send a message of condolence to the Grosvenor family.

Sir Gerald owned 190 acres in Belgravia, adjacent to Buckingham Palace and one of London’s most expensive areas, as well as thousands of acres in Scotland and Spain.

The title and the land will pass to Hugh Grosvenor - who is two years younger than his father was when he took on the fortune at the age of 27 as the sixth duke. Hugh is also the youngest godfather of Prince George.

A staunch supporter of a number of charities and good causes, the duke credited himself with using his vast wealth responsibly.

This included making a £500,000 donation to farmers during the 2001 foot-and-mouth outbreak, as well as fighting a legal case against Westminster City Council in 1990, centred on a number of social housing flats built on the family’s land in Pimlico, London.

The buildings were designed by architect Sir Edwin Lutyens and built between 1928 and 1930. Assigning the lease of the flats to the council for 999 years in 1937, the second duke stipulated they must be used as housing for the working classes.

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When the council wanted to sell the properties below the market value to those working in the borough, the sixth duke refused.

In court, the authority argued that the working classes no longer existed, but the judge ruled in the duke’s favour, backing the clause and his bid to keep low-cost accommodation.

Of his wealth, the duke once said: “Given the choice, I would rather not have been born wealthy, but I never think of giving it up. I can’t sell. It doesn’t belong to me.”

In his early 20s, on becoming trustee of the estate, he was forced to abandon his dream of a career in the armed forces, but satisfied his love of all things military by serving in the Territorial Army.

He suffered a nervous breakdown and depression in 1998, saying the pressures of business and the great number of public appearances he was making overcame him.

The Grosvenor family’s spokeswoman said on Tuesday: “It is with the greatest sadness that we can confirm that the Duke of Westminster, Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor (64), died this afternoon at Royal Preston Hospital.

“He was taken there from the Abbeystead Estate in Lancashire where he had suddenly been taken ill.

“His family are all aware and they ask for privacy and understanding at this very difficult time.

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“No further comment will be made for the time being but further information will follow in due course.”

He is survived by his wife, Natalia Phillips, who he married in 1978 and their daughters, Lady Tamara, born in 1979, Lady Edwina in 1981 and Lady Viola in 1992.

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