His nephew, Sir Arthur Young, was a Member of Parliament and former Chamberlain of the King's Household.
[4] In 1924 Young innovated by forging an international network with Broads Paterson & Co in the UK.
[2] In 1917, he moved from Chicago to New York City, where he resided at 815 Park Avenue on Manhattan's Upper East Side.
[5] Young, who never married, was "remembered in a social setting for his loose fitting tweed clothes from Whitaker & Company in London, pipe smoking and martinis, elaborate meals at Aiken with his cook Margaret Beckford, and his many dogs.
[5] His memoirs, entitled Arthur Young and the Business he Founded, were privately printed in 1948 by J. C. Burton and published by Merrymount Press in Boston.