COX, Colin Charles
Service Number: | PM2920 |
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Enlisted: | 19 August 1940 |
Last Rank: | Seaman |
Last Unit: | HMAS Goorangai |
Born: | Elsternwick, Victoria, Australia, 17 January 1913 |
Home Town: | Brighton East, Bayside, Victoria |
Schooling: | Not yet discovered |
Occupation: | Bank Official National Bank |
Died: | Presumed drowned, Port Phillip Bay, Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia, 20 November 1940, aged 27 years |
Cemetery: |
No known grave - "Known Unto God" |
Memorials: | Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Brighton War Memorial, Plymouth Naval Memorial to the Missing / Lost at Sea, Queenscliff HMAS Goorangai Memorial |
World War 2 Service
3 Sep 1939: | Involvement Royal Australian Navy, Signalman, PM2920, HMAS Goorangai | |
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19 Aug 1940: | Enlisted Royal Australian Navy, Seaman, PM2920 | |
20 Nov 1940: | Discharged Royal Australian Navy, Seaman, PM2920, HMAS Goorangai |
Help us honour Colin Charles Cox's service by contributing information, stories, and images so that they can be preserved for future generations.
Add my storyBiography contributed by Faithe Jones
Son of Charles Cavendish Cox and Grace Cox, of East Brighton, Victoria, Australia.
BATSMAN IN TRAGEDY
Brighton cricketers and Prahran base-ballers learned with regret that one of the victims in the mine-sweeping tragedy last week was Colin Cox. Last year Cox, who was a bank official, made a brilliant 221 not out for Brighton. This season he was also in form and made 79 in the last match He was also a promising baseballer in the Prahran team. He was a member of the RAN Reserve, and had been called up only a week before.
SIGNALMAN C. C. Cox, who lost his life when the mine-sweeper, Goorangai, sank after a collision in the Rip, was well-known in Donald, where he was formerly attached to the staff of the National Bank. As a member of the A.N.A. cricket team he was the leading batsman and could always be relied upon to hit up a fair score. As a mark of respect the team wore black armbands in its match on Saturday. In 1938 he played with the Donald football team, and was a particularly good performer on the back and forward lines, being, in addition to a good high mark, able to turn and kick effectively with both feet. His many friends in Donald regret his death in such tragic circumstances.