During World War II, Young volunteered in Greece as an ambulance driver, and was wounded on the Epirus front. He received a Bronze Star from the United States and the Croix de Guerre from Greece for his service.[5]
Young was active in his field, serving as president of the Archaeological Institute of America from 1968 to 1972 and was Charles Elliot Norton Lecturer in 1968/1969. His professional interests concentrated on Greek and Phrygian archaeology, art, and history, the Early Iron Age, and early writing. Young died in an automobile accident near his home in Chester Springs, Pennsylvania.[1]
Late geometric graves and a seventh century well in the Agora (1939).
Gordion; a guide to the excavations and museum (1968).
Rodney S. Young; Keith DeVries; E. L. Kohler. Three great early tumuli. Philadelphia : University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1981. ISBN9780934718394.
Further reading
Allen, Susan Heuck (2011). Classical Spies: American Archaeologists with the OSS in World War II Greece. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN9780472035397.