Background
Young was born at Berlin, North Dakota, and graduated from LaMoure High School. (Young later married Patricia Byrne, his secretary in the Senate, of Bowman, North Dakota) After college, Young returned home to operate his father"s farm.
Young was born at Berlin, North Dakota, and graduated from LaMoure High School. (Young later married Patricia Byrne, his secretary in the Senate, of Bowman, North Dakota) After college, Young returned home to operate his father"s farm.
He attended North Dakota State University and Graceland College.
At the time of his retirement, he was the most senior Republican in the Senate. Malinda died in 1969. Young became increasingly interested in politics during the depression and drought of the late 1920s and 1930s.
He was active in community affairs, serving on the school, township, and county Agricultural Adjustment Acting (American Automobile Association) boards.
Young was also one of the key persons in developing the Republican Organizing Committee in North Dakota during the 1940s. With the death of John Moses in 1945, Governor Fred G. Aandahl appointed Young to fill the vacant United States. Senate seat, and Young was forced to relinquish management of the family farm, in order to fulfill his duties in Washington.
His major committee assignments were on the Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry committee, and the Appropriations committee of which he was the ranking Republican member. Young, as the longest-serving Republican Senator, would have been in line to become President pro tempore.
However, he had chosen to retire instead of running for a seventh six-year term.
In deference to his long service in the body, he was elected President pro tempore by the lame-duck, Democratic controlled Senate on December 5, 1980, and served for one day. Senator Young died at his retirement home in Sun City, Arizona on May 31, 1983 and was buried at Berlin, North Dakota. The Milton R. Young Power Plant in Oliver County, North Dakota was named in his honor.
He stood for election to the North Dakota House of Representatives in 1932. He won, and was then elected to the state Senate just two years later. In 1974, during his last election for the United States. Senate, Young"s age was being used against him during the Republican primary. Young had himself filmed breaking a piece of board with his bare hands and easily won renomination. As a result of the 1980 elections, Republicans won control of the Senate.
Young spent the remainder of his career in the Senate, becoming one of the longest-serving members of the Senate in its history.