II servicemen raising an American flag over battle-scarred Iwo
Jima. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
In a second photo Rosenthal shot at Iwo Jima, Marines pose in front
of the flag they just raised. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
This black-and-white photo provided by the National Archives shows
Marines raising the Old Glory on the summit of Iwo Jima's Mount
Suribachi, is an enlargement from sixteen millimeter movie frame
exposed by Marine Combat Photographer Sgt. William H. Genaust on
February 23, 1945. Sgt. Genaust was attached to the Fifth Marine
Division and worked shoulder to shoulder with Associated Press
cameraman Joe Rosenthal at the time of the historic incident. (AP
Photo/William H. Genaust)
This black-and-white photo provided by the National Archives shows
Marines raising the Old Glory on the summit of Iwo Jima's Mount
Suribachi, is an enlargement from sixteen millimeter movie frame
exposed by Marine Combat Photographer Sgt. William H. Genaust on
February 23, 1945. Sgt. Genaust was attached to the Fifth Marine
Division and worked shoulder to shoulder with Associated Press
cameraman Joe Rosenthal at the time of the historic incident. (AP
Photo/Files/William H. Genaust)
United States Marines from the 5th Division of the 28th
Regiment gather around a U.S. flag they raised atop Mt. Suribachi
on Iwo Jima during World War II, Feb. 23, 1945. This was the first
flag raised by the Marine Corps at Iwo Jima. The raising of a
second, larger flag later that day was made famous in the
prize-winning photo by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal.
(AP Photo/U.S. Marine Corp, Sgt. Louis R. Lowery, File)
The photo of the Iwo Jima flag-raising runs off the AP wire,
April 3, 1945. Joe Rosenthal won a Pulitzer Prize for the photo.
(AP Photo)
Joe Rosenthal, right, is greeted by his brother William upon
his arrival in his home town, Washington, March 26, 1945. The
Associated Press photographer, with the wartime still picture pool,
who made the famous picture of the Marines hoisting the American
flag over Mt. Suribachi on lwo Jima, spent one hour with his
brother. (AP Photo/Robert Clover)
Members of Boy Scout troop 211 gather around Associated
Press photographer Joe Rosenthal, in their meeting room at
Bethesda, Md., March 30, 1945, as he autographs copies of his
famous Iwo Jima picture. (AP Photo)
AP war photographer Joe Rosenthal, bottom left, looks at
color prints of his Iwo Jima flag raising photo at the
Einsen-Freeman Co. in Queens section of New York, April 1945. With
him, from left to right are Albert Hailparn, and William Adams,
vice president of Einsen-Freeman. (AP Photo/Murray Becker)
Actors James Cagney, left, and Spencer Tracy, center, show
AP photographer Joe Rosenthal, right, one of the posters to be used
in the movie industry's war loan drive, April 10, 1945. (AP
Photo/U.S. Treasury Dept.)
Joe Rosenthal's Pulitzer Prize winning AP photo of the Feb.
23, 1945 flag raising on Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima, was originally
misidentified by military sources. Originally identified, from
left, in this vintage graphic: Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley; Pfc. Ira
Hayes; Sgt. Michael Strank; Pharmacist's Mate 2nd Class John H.
Bradley; Pfc. Rene A. Gagnon; Sgt. Henry O. Hansen. The Marine at
far right was later correctly identified as Cpl. Harlon Block, not
Hansen. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
Marine Sgt. Michael Strank of Conemaugh, PA., reported killed in
action on Iwo Jima, was identified on April 8, 1945 as one of the
marines shown raising the stars and stripes on Mount Suribachi in
Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal's historic picture. (AP
Photo)
Marine Sgt. Henry O. Hansen, 24, of Somerville, Mass., has
been identified as a participant in the dramatic flag-raising
picture taken on Iwo Jima by Associated Press photographer Joe
Rosenthal. Hansen was identified by Marine Pfc. Rene Gagnon, one of
the three surviving soldiers of the six-man group. (AP Photo)
Ira Hayes, one of the six Marines who raised the flag in Iwo Jima,
as depicted in Joe Rosenthal's famous photograph, is seen Feb. 21,
1947. (AP Photo)
Pfc. Rene A. Gagnon, one of the six Marines who raised the flag at
Iwo Jima atop Mt. Suribachi, is seen April 5, 1945. He was rushing
a new battery to a radio unit when he paused to help raise the flag
and was immortalized in Joe Rosenthal's famous photo. (AP
Photo/Staff Sgt. Fedrico Claveria/USMC)
The three surviving Marines who were in the famous
photograph of the flag raising on Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima, are
reunited in Los Angeles for the first time since the war on July
25, 1949. They are en route to Camp Pendleton to reenact their
heroic roles in a movie, 'The Sands of Iwo Jima.' Keft to right
are: Rene Gagnon, Ira Hayes and John Bradley. (AP Photo/Ira W.
Guldner)
Holding the original Iwo Jima flag shown in the flag-raising photo
made by AP staffer Joe Rosenthal, from left to right: Pvt. Ira
Hayes, U.S. Marine Corp.; pharmacist's mate John H. Bradley, U.S.
Navy; Pvt. Rene Gagnon, U.S. Marine Corp. All three, seen in New
York, May 11, 1945, appear in the Iwo Jima photo. (AP Photo/John
Lindsay)
Three survivors of the famous Iwo Jima flag raising on Mt.
Suribachi attend a Washington Nationals-New York Yankees game in
Wash. DC, April 20, 1945. From left to right: House Speaker Sam
Rayburn, D-Tex; pharmacist's mate 2nd Class John H. Bradley of
Wisconsin; Pfc. Rene A. Gagnon of New Hampshire; Nat's owner Clark
Griffith, holding new 7th War Loan poster; and Pfc. Ira Hayes of
Arizona. (AP Photo/Max Desfor)
The flag raised by Marines on Mt. Suribachi on Iwo Jima and
subject of the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo by Joe Rosenthal,
Associated Press photographer with the wartime still picture pool,
flutters at half staff at the capital, where it was flown on May 9,
1945, in mourning for President Roosevelt. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
Marine Lt. Col. E.R. Hagenah, second from left, presents a
bronze statue modeled after Associated Press photographer Joe
Rosenthals picture of Marines raising the American Flag on Mt.
Suribachi in Iwo Jima to Pres. Harry Truman, left, at the White
House, June 4, 1945, Washington, D.C. Rosenthal is second from
right and Felix Deweldon, sculpture of the statue, is at right. (AP
Photo/Robert Clover)
Former Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal holds his
famous Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of the flag raising on Mount
Suribachi as he poses in San Francisco, Feb. 18, 1965. The
flag-raising photo was taken 20 years ago after the Marines landed
on Iwo Jima during World War II. Rosenthal is now photographer for
the San Francisco Chronicle. The photo, often described as the best
of World War II, won Rosenthal the 1945 Pulitzer. (AP Photo)
Gen. George S. Patton acknowledges the cheers of thousands
during a parade through downtown Los Angeles,Calif., June 9, 1945.
Shortly thereafter, Patton returned to Germany and controversy, as
he advocated the employment of ex-Nazis in administrative positions
in Bavaria; he was relieved of command of the 3rd Army and died of
injuries from a traffic accident in December, after his return
home. Joe Rosenthal's famous Iwo Jima flag-raising photograph is
visible on the war bonds billboard. (AP Photo)
AP photographer Joe Rosenthal, seen Sept. 28, 1945, holds a
wood carving depicting his famous photo of the flag raising at Iwo
Jima. (AP Photo)
The Seabees left their imprints on this rock wall, featuring a
sculptured duplicate of the famed flag-raising picture on Iwo Jima,
Feb. 21, 1954. The Island of Iwo Jima is where the U.S. Marines
climaxed their bloody victory by raising a flag atop the island's
Mount Suribachi Feb. 23, 1945. The famed photograph was taken by
Asscociated Press war photographer Joe Rosenthal. The sculpture is
one of the sightseeing points on the island. (AP Photo)
Assembly work started Sept. 13, 1954 on the huge Iwo Jima monument,
depicting the raising of the flag on Mt. Suribachi, on a Virginia
bluff overlooking the Potomac River across from the nation's
Capital. The heavy bronze statue, based on the celebrated
photograph by the AP's Joe Rosenthal, will stand on a bluff near
Arlington National Cemetery. (AP Photo/William J. Smith)
The statue has been nine years in the making. It is modeled after
the photograph snapped by Joe Rosenthal, then with the Associated
Press, on the morning of Feb. 23, 1945. Rosenthal was in the
Pacific an assignment with the wartime picture pool. Almost
immediately upon release of the picture which soon won world wide
fame, Feliz De Welden, an internationally known sculptor on duty
with the Navy, constructed a scale model of the scene. A life-sized
plaster model followed. Heroic sized heads of the six Marines who
participated in the flag-raising were then modeled in clay, over
steel framework. Legs, arms, hands and shoes, in plaster, were
added. The completed plaster model of the entire group in heroic
size was cut into 108 pieces, then cast in bronze and welded
together at the Bedi-Rassy Art Foundry in Brooklyn. Three trucks
were needed to haul the statue to Washington for final assembling.
Various stages in the making of the giant memorial are pictured on
Oct. 9, 1954. (AP Photo)
The Marine Band parades past the Marine Corps War Memorial -- a
study in bronze of the Iwo Jima Flag raising on during a memorial
to Marine dead in connection with a reunion of Veterans of four
Marine divisions. The Marine Corps War Memorial is seen in
Arlington, Va. Joe Rosenthal, The Associated Press photographer who
won a Pulitzer Prize for his immortal image of World War II
servicemen raising an American flag over battle-scarred Iwo Jima.
Rosenthal's iconic photo, shot on Feb. 23, 1945, became the model
for the Iwo Jima Memorial near Arlington National Cemetery in
Virginia. (AP Photo/Harvey Gorry)
Mothers of two Marines who lost their lives after helping to
raise the flag on Mt. Suribachi pose with three survivors and Vice
President Nixon in front of the Iwo Jima monument, Nov. 10, 1954 at
the dedication ceremony in Washington. From left to right: John H.
Bradley of Wisconsin; Goldie Price of Kentucky, mother of the late
Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley; Nixon; Belle Block of Texas, mother of
the late Cpl. Harlon H. Block; Pfc. Rene A. Gagnon of New
Hampshire; and Pfc. Ira Hayes of Arizona. (AP Photo)
Hal Buell of the Associated Press presents AP award to
pulitzer prize winning photographer Joe Rosenthal on his retirment
at Treasure Island Naval Base, San Francisco, Calif., March 24,
1981. (AP Photo)
The three survivors of six men who raised that historic flag
on Mt. Suribachi, on the island of Iwo Jima, are back in Marine
uniforms as they make a Hollywood version of the bloody invasion at
Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 27, 1949. Here with sound trucks in
the background they watch the filming of a scene. The survivors
are: left to right, Ira H. Hayes of Babchule, Ariz.; John Bradley
of Antigo, Wisc. and Rene Gagnon of Manchester, N.H.. All three
have small parts in the film, including a recreation of the flag
raising. (AP Photo/Frank Filan)
Six 'Marines,' including three of the original sextet, recreate the
memorable flag-raising on Mt. Suribachi for a Hollywood motion
picture version of the Iwo Jima invasion at Camp Pendleton, Calif.,
July 27, 1949. Assuming the positions they had in the iconic
photograph, taken by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal,
are: Ira H. Hayes; John Bradley and Rene Gagnon. (AP Photo/Frank
Filan)
Photographer Joe Rosenthal poses for a photo at the New Pisa Bar
and restaurant Monday, Dec. 20, 1994, in San Francisco. Rosenthal,
the photojournalist whose Pulitzer Prize-winning image of World War
II servicemen raising an American flag over Iwo Jima became the
model for the Marine Corps War Memorial, has died. He was 94.
Rosenthal, who took the iconic photograph on Feb. 23, 1945 while
working for The Associated Press, died Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006, of
natural causes at an assisted living facility in suburban Novato,
Calif., said his daughter, Anne Rosenthal. (AP Photo/Eric
Risberg)
Rene Gagnon hands a stone from Mt. Suribachi on Iwo Jima to widow
of Japanese Lt. Gen. Tadamichi Kuribayashi, in Tokyo, Japan, Feb.
25, 1965. Lt. Gen. Kuribayashi committed suicide on the Island
after the Japanese were defeated at Iwo Jima. Gagnon was one of six
U.S. Marines in AP flag-raising picture on the Pacific Island. From
left at presentation in Tokyo are: Taro Kuribayashi, the general's
son; a marine interpreter; Mrs. Yoshii Kuribayashi, Gagnon; his
wife, and Rene Gagnon, Jr. (AP Photo/Nobuyuki Masaki)
Rene Gagnon comforts Nancy Hayes after the burial of her son Ira,
one of the Iwo Jima flag-raisers, in Arlington National Cemetery,
Feb. 2, 1955. Gagnon and Hayes were among six Marines who raised
the flag atop Mt. Suribachi in 1945. Hayes, a Pima Indian, died of
exposure last week on the reservation where he lived in Arizona.
(AP Photo/Charles Gorry)
Joe Rosenthal, left, AP photographer with the wartime pool, takes
time out to rest, March 2, 1945, with Bob Campbell, a Marine from
San Francisco, in front of a large Japanese gun knocked out by
Marines at the base of Mt. Suribachi. Rosenthal scaled the mountain
to make the picture of the U.S. flag being raised there. Rosenthal,
who won a Pulitzer Prize for his immortal image of six World War II
servicemen raising an American flag over battle-scarred Iwo Jima.
(AP Photo)
During a visit to AP's New York headquarters in 2003, former AP
photographer Joe Rosenthal poses with his Pulitzer Prize-winning
photo of the second flag raising on Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima, which
took place Feb. 23, 1945. (AP Photo/Chuck Zoeller)
AP photographer Joe Rosenthal, overlooking Iwo Jima in March 1945.
(AP Photo/U.S. Marine Corps)
Joe Rosenthal's black and white photo negative of U.S. Marines from
the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raising the American flag atop Mt.
Suribachi, Iwo Jima, on Feb. 23, 1945, is handled with gloves by
Associated Ppress chief photo librarian Charles Zoeller while being
shown from its secured archive at the Associated Press picture
library in New York, Monday, Aug. 21, 2006. Rosenthal, an
Associated Press photgrapher who won a Pulitzer Prize for the
image. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
Rene Gagnon, former Marine who participated in the invasion of Iwo
Jima, is shown at New York's Kennedy Airport . Gagnon prepares to
depart for the orient to attend ceremonies commemorating the 20th
anniversary of the landing of the marines on that Pacific Island.
The 39-year-old was one of six servicemen who helped raise the
American flag on Mt. Suribachi during the Invasion. He is pointing
to himself in a historic photograph taken at that solemn moment.
(AP Photo)
A U.S. Mint employee holds a new coin, Wednesday, May 25,
2005, in Philadelphia, which honors the 230th anniversary of the
founding of the Marine Corps, the first time the government has
struck a commemorative coin to salute a branch of the military. The
new silver dollar will feature the famous photograph of the
flag-raising at Iwo Jima taken by Associated Press Photographer Joe
Rosenthal, and on the other side the official Marine Corps emblem
of an eagle, globe and anchor and the Marine motto, 'Semper
Fidelis,' always faithful. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)
Marines at Iwo Jima 3 cent postage stamp issued Washington, D.C.
July 11, 1945, 137,321,000 stamps were sold.
A photo of a former Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal and
his Pulitzer Prize-winning World War II photograph of the flag
raising at Iwo Jima is displayed during a U.S. Marine memorial for
Rosenthal in San Francisco, Friday, Sept. 15, 2006. (AP Photo/Paul
Sakuma)
Ret. U.S. Marine Lt. Gen. Larry Snowden speaks during a memorial
service for former Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal in
San Francisco, Friday, Sept. 15, 2006. Rosenthal was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for the photo he took of the Marines raising the
flag on Mt Suribachi on Feb. 23, 1945, five days into the battle
for Iwo Jima. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
MARCH 3, 1945 U.S. Marines receive Communion from a Marine chaplain
on Iwo Jima. The battle for the island was extremely costly for
both sides: only about a thousand of the 25,000 Japanese defenders
survived; the Americans suffered about 26,000 casualties. The
island was not fully secured by the American forces until March 26,
but the needed airfields were up and running earlier. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
In the Pacific theater of World War II, U.S. Marines hit the beach
and charge over a dune on Iwo Jima in the Volcano Islands Feb. 19,
1945, the start of one of the deadliest battles of the war against
Japan. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines invade the Japanese stronghold at Iwo Jima, Volcanic
Island, on Feb. 19, 1945. The fourth division Marines dig foxholes,
center, uncovering dead bodies, and await further orders. The
Japanese pillbox-blockhouse, which was considered unconquerable,
can be seen at center in the background. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
Two U.S. Marines, slumped in death, lie where they fell on Iwo
Jima, among the first victims of Japanese gunfire as the American
conquest of the strategic Japanese Volcano Island begins on Feb.
19, 1945 during World War II. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines of the 4th Division charge ashore at the start
of the Iwo Jima invasion, as they run for cover in shell holes and
bomb craters made by pre-invasion bombardments, on Feb. 25, 1945
during World War II. Warships offshore give heavy gun support. At
center in the background is a wreckage of a Japanese ship. (AP
Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
A U.S. Marine driving an ambulance jeep struggles in the sandy
beach at Iwo Jima during American advance on the strategic Japanese
Volcano Island stronghold on Feb. 26, 1945 in World War II. (AP
Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
U.S. GI's inspect the remains of an ammunition truck hit by
Japanese fire on the beach at Iwo Jima on Feb. 13, 1945 during
World War II. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines wounded at the beach of Iwo Jima are evacuated on
pontoon barges by hospital corpsmen on Feb. 27, 1945. They will be
taken to an LST standing by for transfer to hospital ships. (AP
Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
With the capture of the elevated Japanese airstrip, at top right,
American equipment and supplies are brought ashore on Feb. 28,
1945. U.S. Marines move forward with tanks and continue the
invasion battle inland on Iwo Jima during World War II. Mt.
Suribachi Yama can be seen beyond the airstrip. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines offer a Japanese prisoner of war, whose face is
obliterated by censors, after he is captured during American
invasion of Iwo Jima, Japanese Volcano Island stronghold, on Feb.
28, 1945 in World War II. (AP Photo/Joe Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines of the Fourth Division shield themselves in abandoned
Japanese trench and bomb craters formed during U.S. invasion and
amphibious landing at Iwo Jima, Japanese Volcano Island stronghold,
on Feb. 19, 1945 in World War II. A battered Japanese ship is at
right in the background at right. (AP Photo)
Injured U.S. Marines walk down the hillside as another wounded is
carried on a stretcher to a medical station below on Iwo Jima,
Japan, on March 2, 1945 during World War II. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
Dead Japanese soldiers who defended the stronghold lie at the feet
of U.S. Marines following American invasion of Iwo Jima, Japanese
Volcano Island, March 2, 1945 in World War II. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
A wounded U.S. Marine soldier, lying on stretcher at left, is given
blood plasma by American Navy hospital corpsmen on Iwo Jima, Japan,
on March 3, 1945 during World War II. Two Marines can be seen
walking away, at right, after getting medical attention. The aid
station is surrounded by captured Japanese equipment. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
The booted feet of a dead Japanese soldier, foreground, protrude
from beneath a mound of earth on Iwo Jima during the American
invasion of the Japanese Volcano Island stronghold in 1945 in World
War II. U.S. Marines can be seen nearby in foxholes. (AP Photo/Joe
Rosenthal)
U.S. Marines aboard a landing craft head for the beaches of Iwo
Jima Island, Japan, on Feb. 19, 1945 during World War II. In the
background is Mount Suribachi, the extinct