Miles Watson, 2nd Baron Manton


Miles Watson, 2nd Baron Manton,, of Compton Verney, Warwickshire and Plumpton Place, East Sussex, was an English peer and racehorse breeder.

Origins

George Miles Watson was born on 21 June 1899. He was the eldest son of Joseph Watson, 1st Baron Manton, the Leeds soap magnate, by his wife Claire Nickols, daughter of Harold Nickols of Sandford House, Kirkstall, Leeds. Watson had three younger brothers, Robert Fraser, Alastair Joseph, and Richard Mark Watson, all born by 1906. He was educated at Harrow.

Succeeds father

He succeeded as 2nd Baron Manton on the death of his father in 1922. In 1927 he sold the Manton estate and racehorse training establishment near Marlborough, Wiltshire, which had been purchased by his father. In 1929 he sold the Compton Verney estate to Samuel Lamb, a cotton manufacturer from Manchester. However unfortunately before the sale he removed the mediaeval stained glass from the chapel, which he sold in 1931 in four lots at Christie's. Much went to the USA, although some is now in the Burrell Collection in Glasgow and in the Market Hall Museum, Warwick.

Career

In the 1920s Manton had been a jockey under National Hunt Rules. having sold his father's briefly-owned seat of Compton Verney, in 1938 he purchased Plumpton Place near Lewes in Sussex, where he established a racehorse stud. Hard Sauce, produced there, sired the winner of the 1958 Derby, Hard Ridden. For the British Bloodstock Agency, he travelled to India and South America. With his brother Robert he was a director of Newmarket Bloodstock Ltd.

Marriages and progeny

He married twice:
Manton died in June 1968 at his home Plumpton Place. On his death, the title passed to his son by his first wife Alethea Langdale, Rupert Watson, 3rd Baron Manton.