Richard Whitehead Young | |
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Major Richard W. Young Utah Light Artillery |
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Born | April 19, 1858 Salt Lake City, Utah |
Died | December 27, 1919 Salt Lake City, Utah |
(aged 61)
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1882–1888 1898–1899 1918–1919 |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Battles/wars | Philippine-American War World War I |
Relations | Brigham Young (grandfather) |
Other work | attorney |
Richard Whitehead Young (April 19, 1858 - December 27, 1919) was a U.S. Army Brigadier General and an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines during the time that the Philippines was a U.S. Territory.
Young was born in Salt Lake City in 1858, to Joseph A. Young and his wife Margaret Whitehead. Joseph Young was the son of Brigham Young and his wife Mary Ann Angell.[1][2] He entered West Point in 1878, and graduated 15th in the Class of 1882. In 1884 he graduated from Columbia University Law School, and practiced as a military attorney until 1888, when he returned to Utah to open a private law practice.
He reentered the military during the Spanish-American War, and led the Utah Light Artillery in the Philippines.[1] When the war ended, he was appointed as an Associate Justice of the U.S. Territory of the Philippines Supreme Court.[1] He later returned to private legal practice, acting as attorney for the Idaho Sugar Company (later becoming the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company).[1]
In 1918 he was commissioned as a brigadier general, and he led a U.S. infantry brigade in France. He died of appendicitis in 1919.
Richard Young married Minerva Richards, the daughter of Henry Phinehas Richards and Margaret Minerva Amanda Empey. Henry Richards was a son of Phinehas Richards and his wife Wealthy Dewey, and thus a brother of Franklin D. Richards. This means that Richard and Minerva were third cousins, since they both descended from Phineas Howe and Susannah Goddard.
Young's daughter Minerva was the wife of Adam S. Bennion.