Background
She was born in New York City to Ming Tai Chen, the wealthy owner of the famed China Doll Night Club and graduated from Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia.
She was born in New York City to Ming Tai Chen, the wealthy owner of the famed China Doll Night Club and graduated from Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia.
A Chinese American, she was the first American woman to explore the Himalayas in the 1930s and Su Lin, the first giant panda brought to the United States, was named for her. After exploring parts of China, Tibet, and India, Young worked as a reporter in Shanghai for the English-language North China Daily News and Arthur Sowerby"s China Journal. In Shanghai, Young met explorer Ruth Harkness, another American woman, who captured the first giant panda to be sent the United States.
Harkness named the panda Su Lin (Chinese: 蘇琳.
Pinyin: Sūlín) for Young, a name also given to Su Lin, a panda born in 2005 at the San Diego Zoo. After relocating several times in China due to the Second Sino-Japanese War (World World War II) Young left China after the Chinese Communist Party takeover in 1949.
She spent time as a radio disk jockey in Taiwan for the United States Armed Forces Network Radio Taiwan (now ICRT) attached to the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) Taiwan. Young returned to the United States in the 1950s living in Virginia, California, and North Carolina.
She died at age 96 in Hercules, California.