Iconic businessman Sam Wyly made and lost a fortune in his 82 years. One of his most recent losses was the sprawling Highland Park estate he called home for 52 years, and that home just hit the market at $12.5 million.

Wyly moved out of the Tudor-style mansion earlier this year after agreeing to pay a judgment of nearly $200 million, which was handed down in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission SEC fraud suit against him and his late brother, Charles Jr., who died in a 2011 auto accident. Though Wyly filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy as an attempt to keep the house, the bankruptcy court rejected his plea.

Located on Beverly Drive overlooking the Dallas Country Club, the stately 7,579-square-foot home was built in 1924 for Dallas businessman Fred Schoellkopf and designed by renowned architect C.D. Hill who likewise designed the recently-raised Trammell Crow mansion in the same neighborhood.

According to the Dallas Morning News, Wyly purchased the one-plus-acre estate in 1965 for $160,000, and it appraised at $12.5 million more than two years ago.

The majestic mansion contains five bedrooms, four bathrooms, a sunroom, study, and third-floor game room along with three fireplaces, a basement, three-car garage, and garage apartment.