Scott Young (writer)

Writer

Birthday April 14, 1918

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Cypress River, Manitoba

DEATH DATE 2005-6-12, Kingston, Ontario (87 years old)

#55566 Most Popular

1918

Scott Alexander Young (April 14, 1918 – June 12, 2005) was a Canadian journalist, sportswriter, and novelist.

He was the father of musicians Neil Young and Astrid Young.

Over his career, Young wrote 45 books, including novels and non-fiction for adult and youth audiences.

Born in Cypress River, Manitoba, Young grew up in nearby Glenboro, Manitoba, where his father, Percy Andrew Young, owned a drug store.

His mother was Jean Ferguson Paterson.

1926

After his father went broke in 1926, the family moved to Winnipeg, but were unable to afford to stay there.

1930

His parents separated in 1930, and he went to live with an aunt and uncle in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, for a year before moving back to Winnipeg to live with his mother.

He left high school at 16 and began working for a tobacco wholesaler.

Young began writing while in his teens, submitting stories to various publications, most of which were rejected.

1936

At the age of 18, in 1936, he was hired as a copyboy at the Winnipeg Free Press and was soon made sports reporter.

1937

He met Edna Blow "Rassy" Ragland in 1937 and the two were married in 1940.

1941

Unable to get a raise at the Free Press, Young moved to Toronto in 1941, covering news and sports for the Canadian Press news agency.

1942

His first son, Bob Young, was born in 1942 and five months later, Young was sent to England to help cover World War II for CP.

1945

He came back a year later and joined the Royal Canadian Naval Reserves, where he served as a Communications Officer until his release from the service when the war ended in 1945.

Young returned to CP and soon joined Maclean's magazine as an assistant editor.

His second son, Neil Young, was born in Toronto in November 1945.

Young began to sell fiction to publications in Canada and the United States including the Saturday Evening Post and Collier's.

1948

He quit his job at Maclean's in 1948 to write short stories full-time.

1949

In 1949, Young bought a house in Omemee, Ontario, near Peterborough.

1956

The family's finances would vary with Young's success in selling his stories and he began taking assignments from Sports Illustrated. His first novel The Flood was published in 1956.

1957

Young moved to Pickering, Ontario and spent a year working in public relations for a jet engine company before joining The Globe and Mail as a daily columnist in 1957 and moving back to Toronto.

1959

In 1959, Young met Astrid Mead while on assignment in British Columbia.

Soon after, he and Edna separated.

1961

Following Young's divorce in 1961, he married Mead.

1962

They had a daughter, Astrid Young, in 1962.

He was also a host on Hockey Night in Canada until getting on the wrong side of Toronto Maple Leafs co-owner John Bassett.

The Leafs threatened HNIC's sponsor and advertising agency until they agreed to fire Young.

1967

In 1967, Young bought a 100 acre farm near Omemee in Cavan Township and built a house there.

1969

In 1969, he asked to be transferred to the Globe's news bureau in Ottawa.

Shortly after arriving in Ottawa, he got into a dispute with his paper over the publication rights to excerpts from a book he had just written with Punch Imlach.

The rights had been acquired by the Toronto Telegram, but the Globe wouldn't allow Young's writing to appear in a competing newspaper.

He quit the Globe and accepted a job offer from Bassett to become sports editor and columnist at the Telegram, moving back to Toronto within weeks of his move to Ottawa.

1971

Young remained at the Telegram until the paper folded in 1971.

He then rejoined the Globe and Mail.

1976

Young and his second wife separated in 1976, and in the fall of 1977, he moved in with fellow Globe writer Margaret Hogan.

1980

The two married in 1980.

At the same time, Young had a falling out with the Globe over stories critical of Imlach written by Donald Ramsay and quit.

He worked with former Toronto Maple Leafs owner Conn Smythe on Smythe's autobiography, which would be published after Smythe's death in November 1980.

In 1980s, he wrote a series of detective stories that featured Inuit detective Matthew "Matteesie" Kitologitak, including "The Shaman's Knife" and "Murder in A Cold Climate".

1988

In 1988, Young received the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame as selected by the Professional Hockey Writers' Association.