Said to have been ‘born with an anchor or a cable in his mouth’, Young was the second son of Vice-Admiral William Young, a partner of Robert Curling in the firm Curling, Young & Co, which specialised in building East Indiamen.
At the 1832 general election Young came forward for the new constituency of Tynemouth as a spokesman of the shipping interest. Opposed by an advanced Liberal, Young claimed that he belonged ‘to no political party, nor ever will’.
Young’s allegiance, though, was far from fixed. At a meeting in Carlton Gardens on 11 March, he pressed Stanley to declare in strong terms his want of confidence in Peel’s ministry, and after abstaining from Russell’s motion for Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835, he supported the Whig ministry thereafter, but continued to sit on the opposition side of the house.
A prolific debater who spoke ‘very rapidly, as sometimes to pronounce four or five words as if all one word’, Young, according to Charles Dickens, earned the reputation of ‘a prodigious bore in Parliament, by speaking immediately before every division, great or small, to the anguish and horror of all parties’.
Narrowly re-elected in 1837, Young was unseated on petition after an election committee ruled that a number of his votes were ineligible. He remained in the public eye, however, and by the late 1840s, he was one of the leading forces in protectionist politics. Over a period of five days, he gave influential evidence to the select committee on the navigation laws, defending the shipping interest against free trade with ‘industry and talent’.
Seeking a return to Parliament, Young came forward in the protectionist interest at the 1851 by-election at Scarborough. Backed by the local shipping interest, he defeated the sitting member, the earl of Mulgrave, who was defending his seat upon his appointment as comptroller of the royal household.
Ridiculed for his verbosity, Young was never unequivocally lauded by his contemporaries. Disraeli believed him to be ‘a man of great energy, and of equal vanity, but of ordinary abilities and no cultivation’.
Young died at home at Wray Park Road, Reigate, in February 1870. His wife survived him. He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Frederick, a leading member of the Royal Colonial Institute. Young’s correspondence and papers are located in the British Library.
