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・ Frank Archer
・ Frank Archibald MacDougall
・ Frank Arellanes
・ Frank Aresti
・ Frank Arkell
・ Frank Armi
・ Frank A. Shepherd
・ Frank A. Sloan
・ Frank A. Stevenson
・ Frank A. Tobey
・ Frank A. Tracy Generating Station
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Frank A. Young (sportswriter)
・ Frank Aaen
・ Frank Aarebrot
・ Frank Abagnale
・ Frank Abarno
・ Frank Abbandando
・ Frank Abbandando, Jr.
・ Frank Abbott
・ Frank Abbott (dentist)
・ Frank Abbott (footballer)
・ Frank Abbott (politician)
・ Frank Abdulai Ayariga
・ Frank Abercrombie
・ Frank Abney Hastings
・ Frank Acheampong


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Frank A. Young (sportswriter) : ウィキペディア英語版
Frank A. Young (sportswriter)

Frank Albert (Fay) Young (1884–1957) was an American journalist. He was widely regarded as the "dean of Negro sportswriters."
==Early life==

Frank Albert Young was born John Lake Caution, Jr. on October 19, 1884 in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, the eldest of four children of John Lake Caution and Annie C. (Collins) Caution. The elder Caution, descended from Haitian immigrants, was originally from Washington County, Maryland and worked in a lumber mill in Williamsport. Annie Caution's mother was Julia C. Collins, who in 1865, produced the first serialized novel written by an African-American woman, ''Curse of Caste, or the Slave Bride''〔Sieminski, Mary (June 1, 2010), "Julia C. Collins: Commemorating Her Life and Work, ''Williamsport (Pa.) Guardian'', at http://www.williamsportguardian.com/?article=201006011601〕〔"Williamsport's Forgotten Author, Julia C. Collins," at http://rcjamesdesign.net/African-American/AAAP4.5.pdf〕 The family lived at 342 Front Street in Williamsport.
In November 1889, Annie Collins Caution died of pneumonia at the age of twenty-seven, leaving four young children aged between one and five. In June 1892, John Caution was fatally injured at an accident at the mill where he worked. Orphaned, the four children were taken to Cambridge, Massachusetts by their father's brother and sister-in-law, Cornelius and Emma (Blake) Caution; upon her death seven months later, all four were placed in a local orphanage. The two eldest, John Lake and Belva Lockwood Caution, were adopted by an African-American couple, William F. and Margaret E. (Green) Overton, of West Medford, Massachusetts〔http://search.ancestry.com/iexec/default.aspx?htx=View&r=an&dbid=7602&iid=004113848_00382&fn=William+F&ln=Overton&st=r&ssrc=&pid=23541787 (on-line ). Retrieved 2010-10-27.〕 where they lived until 1900 when John, known as John Overton, ran away from home, changing his name to Frank Albert Young.〔(September 3, 1905) "Tracing'Overton'. May Have Lived Previously in Medford. Young Colored Man Said To Have Been Run Over in California." ''Boston Globe''〕
Under that name he worked at a number of jobs until he got work as a Pullman porter. By 1905, he was working as a dining car waiter for the Chicago and Northern Railway when he married eighteen-year-old Adaline Harrison in Chicago; they would have two children, a son and a daughter. The marriage was not successful, and in 1918, he married native Chicagoan Cora K. Bowman (1893–1960), who survived him.

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