Was the Flag-Raising on Iwo Jima Posed? (September 2023 | Volume: 68, Issue: 6)

Was the Flag-Raising on Iwo Jima Posed?

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Authors: Marc Lancaster

Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)

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September 2023 | Volume 68, Issue 6

Rosenthal turned his Speed Graphic camera toward the action and pressed the shutter, capturing one of the most recognizable images in the history of photography.
After reaching the summit of Mt. Suribachi, Joe Rosenthal photographed Marines raising an American flag, creating one of the most iconic images of the Second World War. National Archives

The photograph of Marines planting the American flag on Iwo Jima continues to be one of the most inspiring images of World War II. But many people, including visitors at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. when I volunteered there as a tour guide, routinely claimed that the photo was posed. So, I decided to look into the evidence.

I decided to investigate whether the photo of the Iwo Jima flag-raising was staged. 

Joe Rosenthal had been disappointed that he couldn’t follow his two brothers into the Army. It was ironic that he was rejected for poor eyesight, as he had worked as a photographer in the San Francisco bureau of the Associated Press.

He was determined to contribute to the war effort one way or another, so he settled for a photography assignment with the U.S. Maritime Service.

Joe Rosenthal
Joe Rosenthal worked as a press photographer for nearly fifty years, at the AP during the war, and then for the San Francisco Chronicle.

“They wouldn’t let me carry a gun,” he said, “but I could pack my camera right with the boys in the front lines and show them fighting.”

He saw duty in the Mediterranean and England. But he was never in the midst of the action. So, he rejoined the AP in 1944 and secured an assignment as a war correspondent, shipping out to the Pacific that spring. He followed the action from island to island, and on February 19, 1945, went ashore on the first day of fighting on Iwo Jima.

Thanks to vastly improved communications by that point in the war, his photographs from the first few days of the invasion appeared in newspapers everywhere within a day or two. But that was nothing, compared to what was to come on the Marines’ fifth day ashore on Iwo, February 23.

The casualties already had been horrific. By the time the American flag was raised over Mt. Suribachi on February 23, more than 6,000 Marines and 700 sailors had been killed, and 19,000 Americans wounded. 

Iwo Jima was “the most costly fight in which the Marines have ever been engaged,” AP correspondent Elmont Waite wrote in a story filed that day. He was writing from Guam, headquarters of Admiral Chester Nimitz’s Pacific fleet, but his second paragraph mentioned what would be the enduring image of the day: “The Stars and Stripes were raised over the volcanic Suribachi fortress 97 hours after the costly invasion began.”

Staff Sgt. Louis R. Lowery photographed the first flag on Mount Suribachi. National Archives.
Staff Sgt. Louis