Reverend Samuel Hall Young

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Reverend Samuel Hall Young

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Butler, Pennsylvania, United States
Death: September 02, 1927 (79)
Clarksburg, West Virginia, United States
Place of Burial: Syracuse, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Reverend Loyal Young, D.D. and Margaret Porter Roberta Porter Young
Husband of Frances Eddy Young
Father of Abby Lindsley Sanford; Margaret Alaska Kleinschmidt McChesney and Frances Louise Young
Brother of Robert Johnston Young; Lydia Eleanor Young; Watson J. Young; Torrance F. Young; James Wright Young and 2 others

Occupation: Special Rep. of the Presbyterian Nat'l. Board of Missions
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Reverend Samuel Hall Young

http://www.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/john_muir_newsletter/jo...

Samuel Hall Young Explorer Missionary http://scenicwv.org/sketches/HS12%20Samuel%20Hall%20Young.pdf

He was Presbyterian Minister to Alaska 1878-88. He was appointed Governor of Alaska by President McKinley. During the 1st six years of his residence there was no civic government and he devoted his time to driving out witchcraft and slavery. He spent much of his time exploring Southeastern Alaska while engaged in his work he traveled over 15,000 miles. He established all the schools and missions in Alaska; built the 1st church; set up the 1st printing press; was the secretary of the 1st Territrial Convention. Befor his gubanutorial appointment he was the pastor to the Westminster church of Wooster O., and professor of Biblical Instruction at Wooster Univerity.

www.library.state.ak.us/hist/hist_docs/finding_aids/MS203.doc

Samuel Hall Young, “The Mushing Parson” (1847-1927)

by Robert N. DeArmond

Samuel Hall Young was born at Butler, Pennsylvania, on September 12, 1847, the son of the Rev. Loyal and Margaret (Johnston) Young. He was educated at the University of Wooster, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Western Theological Seminary, where he graduated in 1878. He taught school in Pennsylvania, Michigan and West Virginia and was ordained a Presbyterian minister in June 1878.

He landed at Wrangell on July 10, 1878, to begin missionary work. At Sitka on December 15, 1878, Young was married to Miss Fannie E. Kellogg. They settled in Wrangell, and there on August 3, 1879 he organized the first Presbyterian church in Alaska and the first Protestant church since the transfer [of Territory from Russia in 1867]. That same summer he met John Muir and in the fall, with Muir and four Tlinget paddlers, made the first of many trips by dugout canoe in Southeast Alaska. On that autumn voyage they visited both Glacier Bay and the Chilkat country. Young’s book, “Alaska Days with John Muir,” published in 1915, recounts some of their adventures. In the summer of 1881 Young attended Alaska’s first non-partisan political convention as a delegate from Wrangell and served as secretary of the convention. During the 10 years he headquartered in Wrangell, Young established missions at Haines, Hoonah, Howkan, Kasaan, and Tongass.

In 1888 the family left Wrangell and he served successively as pastor at Long Beach, California; Cabery, Illinois; Cedar Falls, Iowa; and Wooster, Ohio.

In 1897, Young was strongly considered by President McKinley for appointment as governor of Alaska. The nod went to John G. Brady, and, with the Klondike Rush as its height, Young was sent to Dawson. He climbed over the Chilkoot Pass with hundreds of others and sent down the Yukon on a scow, arriving at Dawson on October 7. He established the first library at Dawson and on Easter Sunday, 1898, organized the Presbyterian church there.

During the next three years, he organized missions at Eagle, Rampart, Nome, and Teller. In 1901, Young was appointed superintendent of all Alaska Presbyterian missions. He lived at Skagway in 1902-1903, at Council in 1903-1904, at Fairbanks from 1904-06 and again 1907-08, at Teller in 1907-07, at Cordova in 1908-10, and Iditarod in 1911-12. During those years he became known as “the mushing parson” because of his many long journeys on foot.

From 1913 until 1921, Young held the title Special Representative of the Presbyterian National Board of Missions, with headquarters in New York, and during that time he made many trips back to Alaska. His wife, Fannie Kellogg Young died in 1915. He was named general missionary for Alaska in 1922 and superintendent of Alaska missions in 1924, with headquarters in Seattle. In the summer of 1927, as he approached his 80th birthday, he escorted three different groups of Presbyterians to Alaska; then went east to attend a reunion. He was riding in a friend’s car when it had a flat tire. When Young stepped out, he was struck by an inter-urban trolley. He died in the Clarksburg, West Virginia, Hospital September 2, 1927, and was buried beside Mrs. Young at Syracuse, New York.

His books include The Klondike Clan, Adventures in Alaska, and an autobiography, Hall Young of Alaska, published shortly after his death. It dwells particularly upon his first decade in Alaska and his work with the Natives.

Mount Young in the Chilkat Range, Young Island in Glacier Bay, and Young Rock, which he discovered near Wrangell, were all named for S. Hall Young.

http://fairbanks-alaska.com/presbyterian-church.htm

http://www.yukongenealogy.com/index.htm

http://www.archive.org/stream/klondikeclan00younrich

An Autobiography of his life can be previewed in Google Book Search at the following link:

http://books.google.com/books?id=jcpBK1qen_AC&dq=Hall+Young+of+Alas...

The first governor was John H. Kinkead, who served for less than a year before a change in administration in Washington left him out of a job. S.H. Young, a prominent Presbyterian missionary, wrote of Kinkead that he arrived with "an immense supply of cases labeled 'Canned tomatoes.' These 'tomatoes' were proclaimed as tasting exactly like Scotch whiskey and producing the same effect.'" Political scientist Melvin Crain wrote that the first governors "had practically no civil duties to perform except to inspect, report and to enforce a handful of contradictory laws, with no enforcement means provided."

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Reverend Samuel Hall Young's Timeline

1847
September 12, 1847
Butler, Pennsylvania, United States
1879
September 19, 1879
Fort Wrangel, Alaska, United States
1884
February 27, 1884
Fort Wrangel, Alaska, United States
1885
March 9, 1885
Fort Wrangel, Alaska, United States
1927
September 2, 1927
Age 79
Clarksburg, West Virginia, United States
????
Syracuse, New York, United States