According to recent research, the men pictured in the photograph are: Harlon Block, Harold Keller, Ira Hayes, Harold Schultz, Franklin Sousley and Michael Strank. Rosenthal quickly photographed the Marines using his Speed Graphic camera, without the aid of a viewfinder. At the time, he did not realize the significance of the photograph.
Tragically, Block, Sousley and Strank were later killed in action during the battle. However, the three surviving servicemen returned home to a hero's welcome and immediately toured across the U.S. in support of the Seventh War Loan (bonds issued by the government to finance war operations). According to Robert S. Burrell in his book "The Ghosts of Iwo Jima" (Texas A&M University Press, 2006), the Seventh War Loan, with support from the touring Iwo Jima survivors, raised a record-breaking $26 billion for the war effort.
Burrell also explains that after the battle, "the [Marine] Corps mistakenly identified one of the dead Marines in the photo… Harlon Block had been misidentified as Hank Hanson." This was not the only mistaken identity, however. In October 2019, evidence brought forward by historians identified Harold Keller as the figure at the far side of the flagpole, previously believed to have been Rene Gagnon.
By the end of World War II, Rosenthal's photograph had become famous worldwide. The photograph, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1945, served as inspiration for the United States Marine Corps War Memorial, in Arlington Ridge Park, Virginia. The memorial was unveiled on Nov. 10, 1954, in the presence of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy proclaimed that the U.S. flag should fly over the memorial 24 hours a day.
Every Marine's Manual of Vital Skills,




Ira Hayes did not consider himself a hero. Far from it. The bond tour only magnified his PTSD and survivor's guilt, driving him to drink himself to death. There is more than one movie out there that portrays this well.
ReplyDeleteJohnny Cash sings a song about Ira Hayes.
DeleteYour Palatka reader was in MCRD San Diego doing recruit training on this day in 1979. we were about to start second phase at Edson Range. Graduated 06 Apr 79.
ReplyDeleteI beat you to MCRD P.I. by 19 years!!!
DeleteThat was back when the Boot Camp was tough. We had a pretty easy time in '79. One of the Senior D.I's asked if my father had been in PI in '56, turns out they were acquainted. Small world.
DeleteI thought one of the flag raisers on Iwo was Navy Corpsman John Bradley????
ReplyDeleteThat was the second US flag raising on Mount Suribachi
ReplyDeleteMark in PA