![]() In a partnership between the History Division of the Marine Corps and the University of South Carolina, where I work, we are digitizing these films, seeking to provide direct public access to the video and expand historical understanding of the Marine Corps’ role in society. I came across this film clip in my work as a curator of a collection of motion picture films shot by Marine Corps photographers from World War II through the 1970s. ![]() The sequence is intentionally framed by the cinematographer, who was clearly looking for the right image to end the roll of film in his camera. Those two Marines are among hundreds present to remember the more than 6,000 Americans killed on the island in over a month of fighting. It is in the final frames of a film documenting the dedication of one of the three cemeteries on the island. Take for instance, just one scene: Two Marines kneel with a dog before a grave marker. It can even bring Americans alive today closer to a war that ended in the middle of the last century. A larger library of film, and the men captured on them, is similarly emotionally affecting. That moment, captured in black and white by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal and as a color film by Marine Sergeant William Genaust, is powerful, embodying the spirit of the Marine Corps.īut these pictures are far from the only images of the bloodiest fight in the Marines’ history. ![]() (by Greg Wilsbacher, Business Insider) – When most Americans think of the World War II battle for Iwo Jima - if they think of it at all, 75 years later - they think of one image: Marines raising the US flag atop Mount Suribachi, the island’s highest point.
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