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August 31, 2006updated 22 Nov 2022 8:51pm

Joe Rosenthal

By Press Gazette

America's most celebrated World War Two combat photographer has died at the age of 94. Joe Rosenthal, who took the memorable picture of American GIs raising the Stars and Stripes over the island of Iwo Jima, was 33 years old, working for Associated Press, when he landed with the Marines on Iwo Jima, a remote island in the Pacific.

He took the picture of five weary-looking Marines and a Navy sailor struggling to raise the American flag on top of Mount Suribachi. It was the fifth day of the furious month-long battle that left almost 7,000 Americans dead and 19,000 wounded. All but a thousand of the 22,000 Japanese defenders also died.

In fact, the picture Rosenthal took was of a second flag raising. He missed the first flag raising a few hours earlier, but when he climbed the mountain he found the Marines were raising a second, larger flag that could be seen all over the island.

It was that black and white picture, taken at noon at 1/400th of a second, that became world famous — and won Rosenthal a Pulitzer Prize. It was rated one of the 100 most famous pictures ever taken, described by the Pulitzer Committee as "a frozen flash of history".

Rosenthal went on to take pictures of General MacArthur's army fighting in the jungles of New Guinea. He cruised the Pacific with the US Navy and hit the beaches with the Marines landing in Guam and several other Pacific islands.

Rosenthal made little money from his famous picture. He received a $4,200 bonus in war bonds from AP, a $l,000 photographic award from a camera magazine and about $700 for a couple of radio appearances. Altogether, he probably made less than $10,000 from his picture, even though it was often reproduced on calendars, posters, countless newspapers and even for a time on US postage stamps. It was also the model for the huge 110-foot tall bronze Marine Corps Memorial in Arlington Virginia.

After the war, Rosenthal, left AP and joined the San Francisco Chronicle, where he worked for 35 years. He was twice president of the San Francisco Press Club and three times president of the local Press Photographers' Association.

In his home, he kept on a wall a framed certificate declaring him an honourary US Marine. It was, he claimed, his proudest possession.

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