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U.S. Marine Corps Memorial - Iwo Jima

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The Marine Corps War Memorial, commonly known as the Iwo Jima Memorial, depicts one of the most famous incidents of World War II, but is dedicated to all Marines who have died defending the United States since 1775. The base of the Memorial is inscribed with the statement “Uncommon Valor was a Common Virtue.

Interesting Facts:

  • The soldiers commemorated in the statue are in the same positions depicted in the historic photograph taken on February 23, 1945, by Joe Rosenthal.
  • The Memorial is 78 feet tall, so the rifles are actually 12 and 16 feet long, and the canteen included would hold 32 quarts of water.
  • When the statue was being designed, the three surviving soldiers from the photos posed for the sculptor.
  • Casting the statue in bronze was a three year process.
  • The statue was actually transported to Washington, D.C., in a dozen pieces and then bolted and welded together.

Links:

Marine Corps War Memorial

Iwo Jima

Timeline

1945 1954 1954

1961

On February 21, the Marines invade Iwo Jima and captured Mount Suribachi, raising an American flag. Later that day, a larger flag is raised by five Marines and a Navy hospital corpsman. The second flag-raising is captured in a Pulitzer Prize winning photo.

Construction begins on the Memorial. The statue itself was created earlier and took years to complete.

The Memorial is officially dedicated by President Eisenhower on November 10, the 179-year anniversary of the U.S. Marine Corps.

A presidential proclamation states that a cloth flag will fly 24-hours a day at the Memorial.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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