John J. Young

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John J. Young

Birth
Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Death
1 Feb 1898 (aged 28–29)
Nahant, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
West Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Plot
St. Joseph Ave., Section C, Range 14, Grave 439
Memorial ID
View Source
Age 28, First Mate on the three-masted coal schooner "Charles A. Briggs" which sunk in a storm off Nahant, Massachusetts, on Feb 1, 1898, with the loss of eight lives. Husband of Margaret "Maggie" Murphy born in Ireland, they were married 6 Jan 1897 in Rhode Island.

BOSTON IS AT WORK ONCE MORE
STORM'S VICTIMS NUMBER ELEVEN
Comprising the Crew of the Charles A. Briggs - Bodies Identified
Boston yesterday resumed her normal condition as far as street cars and the steam railway traffic is concerned, but the streets are still piled high with snow. The employees of the telegraph and telephone companies were the most desperately busy, but they have succeeded in doing little more than to patch up circuits to New York. Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine and Rhode Island are still cut off from telephone communication. From different points in this territory news of the severity of the storm has come in by every mail since the trains on the various railroads began to run Wednesday morning. Word was received yesterday that Wednesday's report of 12 bodies being found on Baker's Island in Salem harbor, cannot be identified. This will leave the number of fatalities only 11, including the crew of the Charles A. Briggs, which was wrecked at Nahant Monday night.

Agent Allen of the seamen's union, Boston, and Mrs. Erickson, who has a sailors' boarding-house in Boston, visited the scene of the wreck of the Briggs yesterday morning and identified the bodies which have been recovered as those of John Haley of East Boston, the steward, whose body was found first; John Charleson, the Norwegian engineer; Harry and Lewis Milliken, and Samuel Cain. The body of Mate J. J. Young was identified during the night by his widow. Only one body is now missing from the crew. It is thought to be that of Seaman Andrews, as the fragments of a body which were gathered up Wednesday on the shore are believed to be parts of the body of Capt A. W. Wentworth, as the portions indicate a larger man than Andrews. The bodies of the drowned sailors are at the town hall of Nahant, awaiting orders from friends of the dead. If no one comes, the seamen's union will take charge of them. All traces of the wreck on the shore have disappeared, the wreckers have carried off everything, even the fragments of the timber cast up.

Published in the Springfield (MA) Republican, Friday, February 4, 1898, p. 3

According to Nahant death records 1898 vol 481 p 547, he was buried at St. Joseph's, Boston. Parents James Young and Annie E. Hall, both born in Newfoundland.
Age 28, First Mate on the three-masted coal schooner "Charles A. Briggs" which sunk in a storm off Nahant, Massachusetts, on Feb 1, 1898, with the loss of eight lives. Husband of Margaret "Maggie" Murphy born in Ireland, they were married 6 Jan 1897 in Rhode Island.

BOSTON IS AT WORK ONCE MORE
STORM'S VICTIMS NUMBER ELEVEN
Comprising the Crew of the Charles A. Briggs - Bodies Identified
Boston yesterday resumed her normal condition as far as street cars and the steam railway traffic is concerned, but the streets are still piled high with snow. The employees of the telegraph and telephone companies were the most desperately busy, but they have succeeded in doing little more than to patch up circuits to New York. Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine and Rhode Island are still cut off from telephone communication. From different points in this territory news of the severity of the storm has come in by every mail since the trains on the various railroads began to run Wednesday morning. Word was received yesterday that Wednesday's report of 12 bodies being found on Baker's Island in Salem harbor, cannot be identified. This will leave the number of fatalities only 11, including the crew of the Charles A. Briggs, which was wrecked at Nahant Monday night.

Agent Allen of the seamen's union, Boston, and Mrs. Erickson, who has a sailors' boarding-house in Boston, visited the scene of the wreck of the Briggs yesterday morning and identified the bodies which have been recovered as those of John Haley of East Boston, the steward, whose body was found first; John Charleson, the Norwegian engineer; Harry and Lewis Milliken, and Samuel Cain. The body of Mate J. J. Young was identified during the night by his widow. Only one body is now missing from the crew. It is thought to be that of Seaman Andrews, as the fragments of a body which were gathered up Wednesday on the shore are believed to be parts of the body of Capt A. W. Wentworth, as the portions indicate a larger man than Andrews. The bodies of the drowned sailors are at the town hall of Nahant, awaiting orders from friends of the dead. If no one comes, the seamen's union will take charge of them. All traces of the wreck on the shore have disappeared, the wreckers have carried off everything, even the fragments of the timber cast up.

Published in the Springfield (MA) Republican, Friday, February 4, 1898, p. 3

According to Nahant death records 1898 vol 481 p 547, he was buried at St. Joseph's, Boston. Parents James Young and Annie E. Hall, both born in Newfoundland.


  • Created by: BobB
  • Added: Aug 9, 2012
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • BobB
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/95050928/john_j-young: accessed ), memorial page for John J. Young (1869–1 Feb 1898), Find a Grave Memorial ID 95050928, citing Saint Joseph Cemetery, West Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by BobB (contributor 47607961).