Young was one of two sons of a wealthy Bristol merchant, Thomas Young, who at some point before 1408 had married the widow of another prominent Bristolian, John Canynges. The already close relationship between the Young and Canynges families, forged through this marriage, was further strengthened when Thomas Young took on the guardianship of Canynges’s children, who included Thomas, the future mayor of London, and his brother William, who was to become five times mayor of Bristol and one of the most successful merchants of his day.
John Young probably came to London soon after the death of his father, and like his half-brother Thomas Canynges before him became a member of the Grocers’ Company. It is likely that the road to London from Bristol had already been trodden by members of his family, although it is unclear what his connexion, if any, was with the Youngs who were active as grocers in the capital in the late fourteenth century.
By the late 1430s Brown had become increasingly favoured in government circles, with the result that he was frequently able to obtain royal licences enabling him to further his own business ventures. This set him at odds with many in London, particularly with members of the Grocers’ Company, who were outraged at the commercial advantages he was able to secure. Moreover, Brown now availed himself of a royal commission to investigate customs evasions. In the early months of 1438 Young, Canynges and a number of other London merchants, including William Melreth* and William Cottesbroke*, fell victim to a series of malicious allegations concerning their mercantile activities. On 19 Feb. 1438 it was found by an inquisition, headed by Brown, that on the previous 15 July Canynges and Young had exported 200 woollen cloths and tin worth 400 marks from Queenborough to Zeeland without paying customs. Young was further alleged to have exported 2,000 nobles of English gold without licence. While Canynges admitted taking the goods on board, he claimed that he had paid customs in London. Young not only denied his guilt but protested that the charges had been heard before their enemies and ill-wishers. In October 1439 the two half-brothers and business partners, like all their fellow accused, eventually obtained royal pardons in respect of these allegations.
Despite these setbacks, Young rapidly expanded his own business interests and during the 1440s and 1450s rose to become one of the most prominent merchants in London, as well as a merchant of the Calais staple. Central to his career was his membership of the Grocers’ Company, of which he was to serve as warden for two terms, as well as a further year at the head of the company. The date of his admission to the Grocers’ livery is not recorded, although it is clear that he had attained it by the late 1440s. In 1448-9, the year when he frist served as warden of the company, he contributed 13s. 4d. to a levy raised for the defence of Calais, a cause dear to his heart and those of his fellow liverymen.
Unlike some other members of his company, Young did not build up an extensive network of provincial contacts during the course of his business activities. Rather, he seems to have concentrated upon his dealings in London, particularly with fellow grocers and merchants of the staple. Among his partners was Stephen Forster*, with whom he was associated in 1447 in a transaction worth just over £103 which involved Richard Lee and the latter’s son-in-law, John Mitchell.
Young’s successful career as a merchant enabled him to build up a substantial portfolio of property holdings. As a younger son he had only a reversionary interest in his father’s extensive property in Bristol, and this was probably one of the reasons why he moved to London. The same was true of holdings which his mother Joan had brought with her from her marriage to John Canynges, and in this case the two Canynges brothers were first in line after her death in 1429.
The close familial and mercantile links enjoyed by Young fed into his growing prominence as a figure on London’s civic stage, and in particular his political affiliations. He began his public career in July 1447 when he was chosen to represent the city in a dispute, probably with the see of London, involving the church of St. Stephen Walbrook.
Further appointments to city committees followed over the next few years, but in the meantime Young’s ties with the duke of York proved beneficial to himself and his fellow merchants when the King became incapacitated by illness and York assumed the reins of government as Protector. In the spring of 1454, it fell to him to pay into the Exchequer on behalf of the Grocers’ Company the sum of 100 marks ‘for safe garde of the beem’ (a tax imposed by the Crown on all goods weighed by grocers at the city’s ‘Beam’), a sum made up of contributions from no fewer than 80 freemen of the craft. The choice of Young, soon to be picked again as one of the wardens, may well have reflected the fact that the Grocers’ hoped to use any influence that he had with the Protector in order to bolster their efforts in Parliament to have the tax removed.
Between the first and second sessions of the Parliament Young was elected one of the sheriffs of London and Middlesex, a breach in spirit at least of the statute prohibiting the return to the Commons of serving sheriffs. Young’s shrievalty was to be an eventful one, for in late April 1456 serious rioting broke out in London, directed against the Italian community. Much of the resentment stemmed from the Crown’s continued policy of granting licences to Italian merchants enabling them to ship wool by routes other than through Calais. Young and his fellow sheriff were caught up in the disturbances, as they and the mayor, William Marowe, were accosted by a mob of young mercers who were angry at the imprisonment of one of their number for an attack on Alessandro Palastrelli in Cheapside. The rioters then ‘by fforce delivered theyr ffelaw oute of prison’.
Young was a candidate for the aldermannic bench once again in March 1458 when he was among those presented by the ward of Farringdon Without. The election by the aldermen was delayed for a few days after it transpired that procedures had been incorrectly followed, and when it took place Young was once again passed over in favour of another candidate.
The Yorkists’ invasion and their victory at the battle of Northampton in July 1460 was undoubtedly welcomed by many inhabitants of London, even though the city as a whole remained outwardly cautious. Soon afterwards Young and Thomas Canynges were, unusually, chosen jointly to serve as one of the two ‘aldermen’ of the Grocers’ Company. The position was normally reserved for members of the company who had been elected to the civic court of aldermen, but with Canynges apparently growing increasingly frail, it was felt necessary to promote Young to that position in anticipation, perhaps, of his half-brother’s impending resignation from his aldermanry. The Company, led by staplers such as Young, appears to have been especially ready at this time to extend help to the Yorkist lords: at the end of the year more than £200 was raised from the membership for a loan to be given to York’s heir, the earl of March. Young was one of the contributors to the loan.
The accession of Edward IV provided opportunities for men who were prepared to lend liberally to the new rulers, but Young did not do so on a large scale, although in early October 1462 he provided £100, and may have lent similar sums on four occasions from the late 1460s.
Young’s position of relative security in the city hierrarchy as a respected former mayor was shaken when the disaffected earl of Warwick returned Henry VI to the throne in the autumn of 1470. This development split the court of aldermen and following the ‘illness’ of the mayor John Stokton in February 1471 the government of the city was led for a while by Richard Lee before he was ousted in favour of Thomas Cook II*, recently reinstated to his aldermanry by the Lancastrians. The return of Edward IV prompted Cook to take flight, but the city then had to withstand the forces of the Kentish rebels led by Fauconberg. Following the successful defence, the King entered the city on 21 May whereupon he knighted no fewer than 12 aldermen, including Young.
For the rest of his life, Young maintained good relations with the Crown, and reaped further rewards. In May 1472 he was permitted to ship 40 sacks of wool from London, Sandwich or Southampton free of customs in order to secure repayment of a debt of 160 marks owed to him by the keeper of the great wardrobe, probably for goods supplied by him.
In his last years Young seems to have experienced some financial difficulties, at least partly caused by poor cash-flow. Among his principal debtors at the time of his death was a London draper, Richard Langton, to whom he had sold 85 butts of malmsey wine for £475. Several obligations were drawn up, with the final instalment due to be paid at Christmas 1483. It is possible that Young realized that he was unlikely to live that long and so took out an action for debt in respect of the money still owing, prompting Langton to petition Chancery in protest at the apparent breach of the agreement.
An indication of the extent of the debts owing to Young at the time of his death is provided by Joan’s later claim in the context of a long-running dispute with the male heirs of her second husband, the wealthy Sir Thomas Lewknor (d.1485) of Trotton in Sussex that she had brought goods, chattels and debts worth some 3,000 marks to her marriage to Lewknor. She further claimed that the Lewknors had taken possession of various obligations from Richard Langton, worth some £300, as well as other books and ledgers containing lists of Young’s debtors.
