Hubert Coulter: Difference between revisions
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==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
He was born to [[Joseph Coulter|Joseph]] and [[Williamina Bessie Coulter]]. | He was born to [[Joseph Coulter|Joseph]] and [[Williamina Bessie Coulter]] in Stettier, Alberta. With his family, he moved many times as a child since his father was a minister with the United Church. | ||
He attended Scarborough Collegiate Institute (since 1989 called [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._H._King_Academy R.H. King Academy]) for secondary school, and is memorialized on their walls with a picture as one of 66 alumni killed in World War II, as of 2019 [https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/1081739] | He attended Scarborough Collegiate Institute (since 1989 called [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._H._King_Academy R.H. King Academy]) for secondary school, and is memorialized on their walls with a picture as one of 66 alumni killed in World War II, as of 2019 [https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/1081739] | ||
He was a student at Victoria College at the University of Toronto from 1935-1936. | He was a student at Victoria College at the University of Toronto from 1935-1936. | ||
After graduating, he taught at an elementary school in Minnow Lake, near Sudbury. | |||
==Engagement== | |||
While stationed in Blida, Algeria, on 4 April 1943 he wrote to his sister Ruth, asking her to help his girlfriend, Barb, to buy an engagement ring. | While stationed in Blida, Algeria, on 4 April 1943 he wrote to his sister Ruth, asking her to help his girlfriend, Barb, to buy an engagement ring. | ||
Revision as of 05:50, 10 April 2020
Hubert Vincent Coulter (19 May 1915 - 7 May 1943; 27 years) was a Flying Officer of the Royal Canadian Air Force, killed in action during WW2.
Early life
He was born to Joseph and Williamina Bessie Coulter in Stettier, Alberta. With his family, he moved many times as a child since his father was a minister with the United Church.
He attended Scarborough Collegiate Institute (since 1989 called R.H. King Academy) for secondary school, and is memorialized on their walls with a picture as one of 66 alumni killed in World War II, as of 2019 [1]
He was a student at Victoria College at the University of Toronto from 1935-1936.
After graduating, he taught at an elementary school in Minnow Lake, near Sudbury.
Engagement
While stationed in Blida, Algeria, on 4 April 1943 he wrote to his sister Ruth, asking her to help his girlfriend, Barb, to buy an engagement ring.
4/4/43
F/O-W.Coulter-J11504
608 Squadron, R.A.F.,
BKQP [hard to read]
Dear Ruth;
By now you will probably have received my first letter from North Africa. This isn't really a letter, just a note as I have a very great favour to ask of you and I know you will grant it. Barb and I have decided to become engaged and I am sending her a cheque to buy a ring. However she did suggest that you could get it for her. However I told her she might as well save time and get it herself or get her sister to buy it. However, she may still want you to get it, and if she writes you I know you will help her out.
Things are going along fine here and I hope they are at home too. I will be writing home to tell them of my decision about becoming engaged. Barb has been pretty swell to me and has certainly shown herself to be true blue as far as I'm concerned and I know it will make her very happy to have a ring so I am sending the money for it. All for now. Best regards to Bruce
Lots of Love
Hubert.
— Source: Sandra Kenzie archives, retrieved 2020, inherited from her mother Ruth Newman
Service in World War 2
He enlisted with the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) on 12 July 1941. He served with service number J/11504.
After training as a navigator and achieving the rank of Flight Officer, he was posted with the 608th Squadron of the United Kingdom (UK)'s Air Force, the Royal Air Force, which worked closely with the RCAF.
In March, he was posted to his squadron's base, in Algeria, an airport called Blida Airport. They had been operating there since the base was liberated by the 11th British Infantry Brigade] on 8 November 1942. At this point they were flying Lockheed Hudson light bombers.
On 7 May, Tunis and Bizerte were liberated by Allied troops, with Bizerte falling to the Americans at 4:15 pm local time, and the Tunisian capital being conquered five minutes later by the British First Army. It is possible that these actions were being supported by the 608th squadron at the time. [2]
He was reported as "missing after air operations in North Africa" on 7 May 1943.
His younger brother Everett was also killed in action, 9 months later.
Death
He was missing in action since 7 May 1943:
FO. H.V. Coulter Missing.
Missing after air operations in North Africa is FO. Hubert Vincent Coulter, R.C.A.F., 28-year-old son of Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Coulter, 151 [sic - it was actually 157] Wolverleigh Boulevard.
Hubert Coulter, who was born in Stettier, Alta., taught school at Minnow Lake, near Sudbury, before he enlisted on July 12, 1941. He took his military training at St. Hubert and Victoriaville, Que.; Chatham, N.B.; Belleville and Penfield, N.B., where he was commissioned as a pilot officer. in June, last year, he navigated a bomber across to England. In March he was sent to North Africa, soon after becoming a flying officer.
FO. Coulter was educated at the Normal School, Toronto, and Scarboro Collegiate. His elder brother, LAC. Wesley Coulter, is being trained as a navigated [sic] at St. Johns, Que. One of his younger brothers, Sgt. Everett Coulter, R.C.A.F., is overseas. Another brother Kenneth, is in Ottawa with the Inspection Board of the United Kingdom and Canada. One of his sisters is Mrs. B.F. Newman; the elder sister, 14-year-old Elanie, is at home with her parents and 9-year-old Ian Donald.
— Globe and Mail
Pte. [sic] Hubert Vincent Coulter was born May 19, 1915 at Stettler, Alberta. He was the son of Rev. Joseph and Mrs. Bessie Coulter, third oldest in a family of five boys and two girls. They lived in Western Canada until moving to Little Current in 1928. After completing high school, Hubert attended Toronto Normal School. He was an elementary school teacher in Minnow Lake and Webwood, Ontario before enlisting in the R.C.A.F., later becoming a navigator in the airforce. Hubert was reported missing in action on May 7, 1943.
— The Manitoulin (Island) Expositor, special issue, 1994.
Along with others who have no known grave, he is commemmorated at the Malta Memorial, in Malta, Panel 10, Column 1.
His name also appears as at the University of Toronto, at the Memorial Arch – the names of those who died in the Second World War were added to the archway beneath the Soldiers’ Tower in 1949. The name of “F/O H. V. COULTER R.C.A.F.” is among the names inscribed.
His name also appears in the University of Toronto Memorial Book, Second World War 1939-1945. Memorial Book – University of Toronto Memorial Book, Second World War 1939-1945. Published by the Soldiers’ Tower Committee, 1993. Entry on page 15 reads: F/O Henry (sic) Vincent COULTER RCAF, 608 Sqn RAF. Former student Victoria College, 1935-36. Killed on active service on convoy duty in the Mediterranean, 21 (sic) May 1943. Name inscribed on the Malta War Memorial, Malta.
Sources
Canadian Virtual War Memorial [3]
Records search [4]