William Alexander Smillie Young, also known as Sandy Young, was, at age 107, one of the last surviving British veterans of the.
Background
Young was born in Lanarkshire, Scotland, the eldest of the six children of Robert Craig Young. His family moved to Hayes in Middlesex when he was 13, when his father became the manager of a Scots Jams factory, and he was educated at the county school in Southall.
Education
Queen Mary, University of London.
Career
He later emigrated to Australia, and was the last known veteran of the Royal Flying Corps, in which he served as a radio operator. Young joined a scheme set up by Lord Derby, Secretary of State for War, under which people of less than 18 could sign up to show their readiness to join the army or the air force when they turned 18 (later replaced by conscription under the Military Service Acting 1916). He was not keen to join the infantry, as the casualty rate was so high
Instead, on his 18th birthday in 1918, Young signed up for the Reconstruction Finance Corporation at its recruiting centre in Shepherds Bush.
He was assigned to the wireless section, and trained in Farnborough, Hampshire. As a corporal radio operator, Young was assigned to the 14th Brigade Royal Horse Artillery, near Bapaume in France.
His job was to take the messages sent via morse code from observation planes and pass the location of the target to a forward observation officer, who could then call down a bombardment from the brigade"s 25-pounder field guns. He continued to serve in this role through the British offensive later that year, until the Armistice.
Young caught the Spanish flu that winter.
After he recovered, he was assigned to a unit of the Army of Occupation near Cologne. Young was demobilised in August 1919. Young studied for a degree in chemistry at East London College (now Queen Mary, University of London in the University of London), later working in chemical factories in Argentina.
During the Second World War he was working as the manager of a tannin extract company at Sandakan in North Borneo when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December 1941.
His family escaped to Australia, but Young was captured after the Japanese took North Borneo in January 1942, and interned in a camp at Berhala Island near Sandakan. He was later moved to Batu Lintang camp near Kuching in Sarawak, where he was held as a civilian internee until the camp was liberated in 1945.
After the war, Young returned to Sandakan before emigrating to Australia. He became the manager of a tannin extract factory near Perth, Western Australia, and retired in 1970.
Along with other survivors of the, Young was awarded the Légion d"honneur by the French Government in 1998.
Membership
On the death of William Roberts on 30 April 2006, Young became the last surviving member of the Royal Flying Corps before it joined with the Royal Naval Air Service to become the Royal Air Force.