QUINTEN E MULLEAVEY
VIEW ALL PHOTOS (6)
HONORED ON PANEL 47E, LINE 52 OF THE WALL

QUINTEN EMILE MULLEAVEY

WALL NAME

QUINTEN E MULLEAVEY

PANEL / LINE

47E/52

DATE OF BIRTH

12/16/1948

DATE OF CASUALTY

04/03/1968

HOME OF RECORD

NORTH WOODSTOCK

COUNTY OF RECORD

Grafton County

STATE

NH

BRANCH OF SERVICE

ARMY

RANK

SP4

Book a time
Contact Details
STATUS

MIA

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR QUINTEN EMILE MULLEAVEY
POSTED ON 5.29.2018
POSTED BY: Kelli hutton

Quinten e mulleavey

I'm looking for abby mulleavey quinten mulleavey great niece she posted a post on this page I would love to send her his pow bracelet I gave worn.my email is in my post
read more read less
POSTED ON 5.29.2018
POSTED BY: Kelli hutton

Pow missing in action bracelet

If anyone in the mulleavey family would like to have quinten E mulleavey pow MIA bracelet I have wore it for years if anyone in his family reads this I would be happy to send it to a family member I think about him every time I look at it.the family is from NH if anyone sees this or knows the family.
read more read less
POSTED ON 2.20.2017
POSTED BY: Abbie Mulleavey

Great Uncle Quinten

Hi Great Uncle Quinten, You and I have never meet but I've heard your stories. I wish I could have meet you. When I was assigned a research paper during the time this war took place I never thought it would turn out so personal. Reading about all you is unbelievable. It would have been an honor knowing you and calling you family.

read more read less
POSTED ON 8.15.2015
POSTED BY: KathyYeo

Never Forgotten

I wear your bracelet as a constant reminder of your sacrifice for my freedom. May God bless you.
read more read less
POSTED ON 6.24.2014
POSTED BY: Greg

I never forgot

I was in Mulleavey's platoon C/2/503/173 Abn Bde- Just two squads or about 18 men. I came in country with him so I was the first person to hear that he was gone. SP4 Reed (or Read) approached me, knowing we were friends and said "Mulleavey is gone" . They were coming off an ambush patrol the first day after we had been inserted into the Tiger Mountains. At some point they realized Mulleavey was missing. Because we had had a recent incident where 3 men had deliberately missed a troop movement, someone decided Mulleavey had left the company to visit the villages on the coast below. We tracked him down a canyon and we found sign that he had been captured -scuff marks in the sand where he had been pushed to the ground. Years later, 2001 or so, I read that he had been taken and then shot. I don't think a a day has gone by that I didn't think about him as in "Mulleavey is still there."
read more read less