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[[File:Everett Malcolm Coulter.jpg|thumb|Everett Coulter, during WWII]]
[[File:Everett Malcolm Coulter.jpg|thumb|Everett Coulter, during WWII]]
'''Everett Malcolm Coulter''' (23 July 1920 - May 1943) was a son of Son of Joseph and Williamina Bessie Coulter, of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, killed in action during WW2.
'''Everett Malcolm Coulter''' (23 July 1920 - May 1943) was a son of [[Joseph Coulter|Joseph]] and [[Williamina Bessie Coulter]], of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, killed in action during WW2.


==Service in World War 2==
==Service in World War 2==

Revision as of 12:16, 8 July 2018

Everett Coulter, during WWII

Everett Malcolm Coulter (23 July 1920 - May 1943) was a son of Joseph and Williamina Bessie Coulter, of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, killed in action during WW2.

Service in World War 2

He served with service number R/156195 as Warrant Officer Class II in the 78th Squadron of the Royal Canadian Air Force.

Son of Joseph and Williamina Bessie Coulter, of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Death

He was missing in action since May 1943:

Globe and Mail, 1943

Flt. Sgt. Everett Malcolm Coulter, 151 Wolverleigh Blvd., missing, ws born in Calgary in July, 1920. He is a graduate of Toronto Normal School and before enlisting in March, 1942, taught school for two years in the Sunderland district. He graduated at Crumlin in February, 1943, as a navigator and went overseas the following month. He had been on operational assignments during the past three months in Halifax bombers. A brother, Hubert, an R.C.A.F. observer, has been missing since May, 1943, and is now presumed dead. Another brother, Wesley is a sergeant navigator in England

— Globe and Mail

Pte. [sic] Everett Malcolm Coulter was born July 23, 1920 at Calgary, Alberta. He was the son of Rev. Joseph and Mrs. BEssie Coulter, fifth oldest in a family of five boys and two girls. They lived in WEstern Canada until moving to Little Current in 1928.

— The Manitoulin (Island) Expositor, special issue, 1994. (Note: it contains several inaccuracies)
Inscription at Runnymede Memorial

Along with 20,450 others who have no known grave, he is commemmorated at Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom, and referenced on grave reference panel 254.

Sources

Canadian Virtual War Memorial [1]