Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

A S Doc Young

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Status
  
Deceased

Occupation
  
Journalist, writer

Name
  
A. "Doc"

Education
  
Hampton University

Ethnicity
  
African American

Spouse(s)
  
Hazel M. Young

Role
  
Journalist

Books
  
Negro firsts in sports

Full Name
  
Andrew Sturgeon Young

Born
  
October 29, 1919 (
1919-10-29
)
Dunbrooke, Virginia

Children
  
Norman Gregory Young, PhD; Brenda L. Young, Esq.

Died
  
1996, Los Angeles, California, United States

Notable credits
  
The Chicago Defender, Ebony, Los Angeles Sentinel

Andrew Sturgeon "Doc" Young (October 29, 1919 – September 6, 1996) was an American sports journalist and author. He was also one of the first African American publicists working in Hollywood. Throughout his career he received numerous honors from the National Newspaper Publishers Association.

Contents

Background

Andrew Sturgeon Young was born in Dunbrooke, Virginia, the eldest child of Andrew P. Young and Gertrude Norman. In 1941, he graduated from Hampton Institute (now Hampton University) with a bachelor's degree in business administration. While a student at Hampton, he served as editor of the school newspaper.

Career

As a young man, he was influenced by the work of Frank A. (Fay) Young (no relation), the first African American to have a weekly sports column.

In the 1950s, he served in several top editorial positions at Jet Magazine and Ebony Magazine. He also worked in editorial positions at the Los Angeles Sentinel and the Chicago Defender.

Young also has the distinction of being the first black publicist in Hollywood. He worked as a unit publicist on the films The Defiant Ones and Kings Go Forth.

Additionally, Young is the author of several books, including Negro Firsts in Sports (Johnson Publishing Company, 1963).

Death

Young died in 1996 from pneumonia in Los Angeles.

References

A. S. "Doc" Young Wikipedia