Savill was born in the parish of
Tinwell, Rutland, the only son of George Savill of Ingthorpe House. He arrived in
Adelaide sometime before 1871, when he was, as "Cerberus", drawing political cartoons for
The Portonian, a weekly satirical newspaper, and was also exhibiting his artwork. He married and had a home at a property at
Campbelltown. He was a member of the
Adelaide Racing Club and acted as starter in 1874. He joined the rival
South Australian Jockey Club after its re-formation in 1875. His horse The Buck raced in the Selling Hurdles of New Years Day 1877 With no other qualifications apart from long experience with horses he set himself up as a trainer of thoroughbreds, with considerable success: Wild Irishman, a brown gelding jumper he purchased from Hutchinson, performed credibly without placing and was sold to H. E. Downer. He trained
A. R. Malcom's jumper Unknown, grey gelding Sheet Anchor for
J. L. Stirling and flat-racer Nelly for George Church. after the Newmarket incident and Savill's legal tussle with the S.A.J.C. committee, (see below) of which Pile was a member. In May 1881 Pile sold up and Savill purchased his The Assyrian (previously Rothschild). He also trained horses for W. B. Rounsevell, M. C. Jacobs,
C. Leslie Macdonald, J. Crozier and Tom Barnfield. Among his successes were: :
Device, won the 1878 S.A.J.C. St. Leger Stakes ridden by McMahon; and the S.A.J.C. Accession Winter Handicap followed by the Queen's Guineas (both wins with
Tom Hales in the saddle), and subsequently sold to Seth Ferry. :
St. Barb won the 1880 A.R.C. New Years Gift and the Newmarket Handicap at Morphettville (held over from Christmas due to bad weather) :
The Wandering Jew in 1879 won the SAJC Flying Handicap and Spring Handicap, and later sold to W. A. Long of Sydney :
Pawnbroker won the 1879 Newmarket Guineas and S.A.J.C. Spring Derby :
Banter won the Adelaide Cup of 1879 and the (Queen's) Birthday Cup of 1880 :
First Water won the 1880 Adelaide Cup :
Sir Charles won the Flying Handicap at the 1880 Christmas meeting :
The Israelite won the 1881 South Australian Stakes :
Henrietta, her daughter, won the 1881 A.R.C. Trial Handicap :
Footstep won the 1882 A.R.C. City Handicap :
The Assyrian was bought by Savill from William Pile in May 1881 for £236. Two months later, with 8 st. 6 lb. and 9 st. 1 lb., he won the principal handicaps at the A.R.C. Winter Meeting. He was entered for the 1882 Melbourne Cup with little chance of success, but last-minute rain turned the track to a quagmire, which suited the heavyweight horse admirably and he came home a winner. In all, Savill won 111 races, with total prizemoney £12,252 10s., not to mention whatever he made on wagers, and "it seldom occurred that a Lockleys horse surprised his trainer by winning".
Return to England Shortly after his 1882 triumph with The Assyrian, Savill and family left for England, and lived in
St Martin's,
Stamford, Lincolnshire. The eldest daughter married the son of a war hero; the youngest married an Earl. He was involved in thoroughbred racing in England, and had a horse named Ringmaster who won some good races. In May 1909 he was committed for trial at the Meath Assizes charged with feloniously shooting at one Charles Fortescue Uniacke at
Dunboyne, near Dublin on 19 May 1909. He had been summoned to Uniacke's house "The Villa" by his wife, promising that she would be alone. (This was not a romantic tryst: Savile had apparently written to her father and cousin letters containing some accusation.) He entered the drawing room and her husband appeared. A scuffle ensued between them and Savile drew his revolver, which went off harmlessly, though whether deliberate or accidental is unknown. His death in 1920 went unremarked in the Australian press. Others who sailed to the Colonies, made a fortune and promptly returned to England with their new-found wealth, met a similar fate. ==Personality==