Eve Saville, The Institute for Study/Treatment of Delinquency (Portman Clinic>>Tavistock), and Founder Victor Neuburg (Crowley’s lover)

By letsdothis3

Excerpt from LSE & the Beginnings of Psychiatric Social Work & Child Care (Occult Yorkshire 11), facts are taken from a Mental Health History Timeline assembled by Middlesex University…(read first part of the article, good info, including tie of Lord David Owen (pedo) to Jimmy Savile)

The Institute for the Study and Treatment of Delinquency (ISTD):

I noticed in the Timeline at this point (1986) the mention of “MBE [first appointment to the Order of the British Empire, the one before OBE] in New Year Honours: Miss Eve Saville, General Secretary, Institute for the Study and Treatment of Delinquency.” A quick search revealed that Miss Eve Saville was a Fabian.

Whether she was related to Jimmy, OBE, I do not know and I doubt anyone else does (not counting those who do). The names Savile and Saville seem to be more or less interchangeable, and one easy way for Sir Jimmy (who called his mum “the Duchess”) to cover any possible aristocratic ancestral tracks might have been to remove one of the l’s.

Eve is a somewhat mysterious character, considering there is almost nothing about her online and yet there is a Memorial Lecture named after her. She was the author of an obscure tract called “A History of the I.S.T.D [Institute for the Study and Treatment of Delinquency]: A Study of Crime and Delinquency from 1931 to 1992.

After a period searching through Google Books, I found a most unexpected affiliation between Eve Saville and Victor Neuburg, Crowley’s ill-fated homosexual partner and disciple, and fellow phallus-worshipper with Dion Byngham. In The Magical Dilemma of Victor Neuburg, the author Jean Overton Fuller reveals, through her correspondence with Eve Saville, that Neuberg was one of the founding members of the ISTD. In a letter to Fuller, Saville writes that Neuberg “was present at the very first meeting [at Primrose Hill, near Hampstead, and] appeared as one of the original members of the Executive Committee and as Honorary Secretary at the beginning of 1931.”

A list of thirty-nine Vice-Presidents for 1934 included Freud, Jung, Adler, Havelock, Ellis, and H. G. Wells.