Young, town, south-central New South Wales, Australia. It is situated on Burrangong Creek and the Western Slopes of the Great Dividing Range.
The first settlement in 1830 was a sheep station. The locality was once known as Lambing Flat, for the land’s use as a place for ewes to give birth. Gold was discovered locally in 1860, and thousands of prospectors flocked to the area. White (European) miners soon began rioting against the many Chinese miners who had also come seeking gold and repeatedly forced the Chinese from their claims. Once the riots had been quelled by mid-1861, a significant number of the Chinese remained in the region. Proclaimed a town in 1861 and a municipality in 1882, the community was named after Sir John Young, state governor (1861–67).
Young serves a district of cherry, prune, apple, and pear orchards and cereal, cattle, poultry, and pig farming. Industries include fruit processing, magnesium oxide treatment, knitwear production, brandy distilling, steel fabrication, and flour milling. The town is the site of the annual National Cherry Festival (December). The Lambing Flat Chinese Tribute Garden and the annual Lambing Flat Chinese Festival (Easter) commemorate that community’s contributions to the town. Young has rail and road links to Sydney (170 miles [270 km] northeast). Pop. (2006) local government area, 11,984; (2011) local government area, 12,236.