Posted on February 23, 2015
I sometimes avoid talking about World War II historical anniversaries, because they are so, so brutal. This one is no different.

The island's highest and most strategic point was Mount Suribachi. During the battle for Iwo Jima, on this date in 1945, U.S. Marines climbed to that point and raised an American flag. Marine photographer Louis Lowery was with them and took a photo:
This photo did not become amazingly famous.
The raising of the U.S. flag bolstered the courage of the fighting forces. Men cheered for and were cheered by the sight.
A few hours later more Marines headed up with a larger flag. This flag-and-pole were heavy enough that five Marines and one Navy corpsman raised it.
Joe Rosenthal, a photographer with the Associated Press, a Marine still photographer, and a motion-picture cameraman were there to record the raising of the second, larger flag.
After the flag pole was fully erect, Rosenthal took a photo of 18 soldiers around the flag. They were smiling and waving for the camera.
Rosenthal sent his film to Guam to be developed and printed. An Associated Press photo editor saw them and picked out one of the photos – this one:
We are used to instant digital photography and transmissions, but in 1945, it took a lot of time to send a physical roll of film to the developer, and of course to develop and print the film. The fact that this photograph was appearing in newspapers just seventeen and one-half hours after Rosenthal shot it was amazingly fast, for the time.
Back on Guam, someone asked Rosenthal if he had paused “the photograph.” Rosenthal assumed that the questioner meant the waving-smiling photo and answered, “Sure!” He did not realize that the questioner meant his six-guys-raising-the-flag photo – which was NOT staged.
Rosenthal did not realize that his six-guys-raising-the-flag photo would become the most reproduced photograph in history. He didn't know that it would win him a Pulitzer Prize. He didn't know that people would be confused by the two flag raisings and his answer about (he thought) another photo being staged, and he didn't know that, being confused, a Time-Life correspondent would say, “Rosenthal climbed Suribachi after the flag had already been planted. ... Like most photographers [he] could not resist reposing his characters in historic fashion.” (Of course, this incorrect report was quoted over and over again and added to confusion.) Rosenthal didn't know that people would ask him if the photo was staged over and over again – and, in some cases, accuse him of staging his famous shot over and over again – for years and for decades.
Rosenthal did not realize that his six-guys-raising-the-flag photo would become the most reproduced photograph in history. He didn't know that it would win him a Pulitzer Prize. He didn't know that people would be confused by the two flag raisings and his answer about (he thought) another photo being staged, and he didn't know that, being confused, a Time-Life correspondent would say, “Rosenthal climbed Suribachi after the flag had already been planted. ... Like most photographers [he] could not resist reposing his characters in historic fashion.” (Of course, this incorrect report was quoted over and over again and added to confusion.) Rosenthal didn't know that people would ask him if the photo was staged over and over again – and, in some cases, accuse him of staging his famous shot over and over again – for years and for decades.

Not only has Rosenthal's photo been reproduced by everyone, everywhere, a stamp with the image was released in 1945, and a statue of the image was crafted to serve as a memorial at the entrance to Arlington National Cemetery.
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