Early years Alfred Fabian Young, known to family and friends as "Al," was born January 17, 1925, in
New York City. He was the second son of Gerson Yungowitz, a
Polish-born
Jew who had grown up in
London, and the former Fanny Denitzen, an East European émigré to America. The family surname was Americanized to Young after his father's arrival in America. Young attended
public schools, graduating from
Jamaica High School in
Jamaica, Queens at the age of 16, academically ranked 4th in his class of 400 students. In 1952 Young married Marilyn Mills, with whom he ultimately raised three daughters. After his retirement from teaching, Young took a position as a Senior Scholar in Residence at the
Newberry Library in Chicago. Freed from the constraints of the classroom, Young managed to increase his literary productivity, releasing several essays collections and expanding his influential 1981 article on colonial shoemaker George Roberts Twelves Hewes into book form as
The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution (1999).
Death and legacy Al Young was stricken by his first
heart attack in May 2012. His productive work as a working historian was thereby brought to an end. Young died November 6, 2012, in
Durham,
North Carolina, following a second heart attack — this time fatal. He was 87 years old at the time of his death. Young was remembered by his peers as a scholar of broad intellect with an exhaustive knowledge of his area of specialization. Historian Gregory Nobles, a collaborator with Young on a book project, recalled: "It’s hard to imagine anyone who knew the field better or cared more about really getting history right, especially about getting ordinary people — and their politics — into the picture." Characterizing him as a "
New Left historian before there was a New Left," historian Michael D. Hattem declared that "Young’s greatest historiographical legacy may be his commitment to the idea that everyday people were historical actors, and the fact that that hardly seems revolutionary or revelatory is largely
because of Al Young." ==Works==