Peg Mullen Dead, Author Of Unfriendly Fire

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| 10/ 4/09 11:34 PM | AP

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LA PORTE CITY, Iowa — Peg Mullen, an author and former Iowa farm wife who hounded the U.S. military to find the truth about her son's death in Vietnam, has died. She was 92.

Family members said Sunday that she passed away Friday at a nursing home in La Porte City.

Peg Mullen wrote the 1995 book "Unfriendly Fire: A Mother's Memoir" after her son Michael died at age 25 when a U.S. artillery shell fell short and killed him on Feb. 18, 1970, near the South Vietnamese village of Tu Chanh.

"This is the first book you've got from the family side of a Vietnam story," Mullen told The Associated Press in a 1995 interview before the book was released.

"All you've read everywhere is the blood and the guts," she said. "But you haven't had anything coming out of what went on as far as the family, as far as brothers and sisters and mothers and dads."

Almost from the day Mullen and her husband, Gene, who died in 1986, learned that Michael had been killed, she tried to get more information about their son's death from the U.S. military. Her full-page ad in The Des Moines Register protesting the war and marches in anti-war demonstrations put her on par with more notable protesters of the day.

Her other son, John Mullen, said Sunday that he doesn't know if his mother was ever satisfied with the information she tracked down, "but she came to terms with it."

"If there was one thing, she brought to the forefront the idea of friendly fire. It was a term that never got much play until that time," he said. "I think she'll be remembered as somebody who asked a lot of questions, somebody who wouldn't take a pat answer, somebody who would stand up for something she believed in. You need those types of people."

Mullen received many letters, phone calls and notes from other parents who had lost sons and from combat veterans who told her they knew and had served with Michael.

Her book includes 40 letters from Michael, along with an account of her conversation one night in 1989 with the man who told her he had fired the fatal shell. It also lambasts Norman Schwarzkopf, the Persian Gulf War general who was Michael's battalion commander in Vietnam.

The autobiography was a follow up to "Friendly Fire," a book by C.D.B. Bryan and a television movie of the same name that starred Carol Burnett and Ned Beatty.

According to the University of Iowa library's Iowa Women's Archives, Mullen was born in 1917 in Pocahontas, about 140 miles northwest of Des Moines. She was inducted into the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in 1997.

Mullen also is survived by her daughters Patricia Hulting, of Des Moines, and Mary DeJana, of Kalispell, Mont., and her grandchildren.

(This version CORRECTS the spelling of Ned Beatty's last name.)

LA PORTE CITY, Iowa — Peg Mullen, an author and former Iowa farm wife who hounded the U.S. military to find the truth about her son's death in Vietnam, has died. She was 92. Family members said...
LA PORTE CITY, Iowa — Peg Mullen, an author and former Iowa farm wife who hounded the U.S. military to find the truth about her son's death in Vietnam, has died. She was 92. Family members said...
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She was an amazing woman who has done more than I every will. She was my hero and I miss her.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 10/05/2009
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Must mothers lose their children before we learn the wrongness of war? RIP, Mrs. Mullen. You were a courageous woman.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 10/04/2009
- ricelaker I'm a Fan of ricelaker 160 fans permalink
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Peg, many know you as a woman of justice and one who advocated against war and for truth. I also will remember you as one that came to our home to offer help and condolences when my brother died. May you find peace with Gene and Michael. You have fought the good fight. You stood up for your son, your family, yourself and for all of us. Thanks, Peg.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 10/04/2009
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A classmate of mine lost a brother in Vietnam, we were sitting in a 9th grade class when they knocked on the door the day he learned he was wounded. A couple of days later in another class deja vu, except this time his brother was dead.

Years later I took care of their mom in the hosptital and I told her how deeply sorry I was to hear of her loss all those years before. She had become an antiwar activist she told me, and she never wanted to see another soldier die in a stupid war again. Thank God she didn't live to see the Iraqi one.

RIP Mrs. Mullen, I'm sure your son was waiting with a huge grin and a thank you when you arrived at the Pearly Gate.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 10/04/2009

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