| 1. | Andrew (Jackson, Jr.), born 1932, U.S. clergyman, civil-rights leader, politician, and diplomat: mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, since 1981. |
| 2. | Art(hur Henry), 1866–1944, U.S. cartoonist and author. |
| 3. | Brigham, 1801–77, U.S. leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. |
| 4. | Charles, 1864–1922, U.S. army colonel: highest-ranking black officer in World War I. |
| 5. | Denton T. (Cy ), 1867–1955, U.S. baseball player. |
| 6. | Edward, 1683–1765, English poet. |
| 7. | Ella, 1867–1956, Irish poet and mythologist in the U.S. |
| 8. | Lester Willis (“Pres”; “Prez” ), 1909–59, U.S. jazz tenor saxophonist. |
| 9. | Owen D., 1874–1962, U.S. lawyer, industrialist, government administrator, and financier. |
| 10. | Stark, 1881–1963, U.S. drama critic, novelist, and playwright. |
| 11. | Thomas, 1773–1829, English physician, physicist, mathematician, and Egyptologist. |
| 12. | Whitney M., Jr., 1921–71, U.S. social worker and educator: executive director of the National Urban League 1961–71. |
| Young, Brigham 1801-1877. American religious leader who directed the Mormon Church after the assassination (1844) of its founder, Joseph Smith. He led an exodus of the Mormons from their troubled settlement in Illinois to the site of present-day Salt Lake City, Utah, where they established a permanent home for the church (1847). |
Young , Thomas. 1773-1829.
British physician and physicist who in 1801 postulated the three-color theory of color vision. Young also discovered (1801) astigmatism and described accommodation.