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Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:27am On Aug 30, 2014
Although a picture is worth a thousand words, photographs often lie. What’s seen on the negative isn’t necessarily what’s going on before the lens. There are unexpected tales behind some of the most recognizable photographs in history—some tragic, some uplifting, but all incredible.

10: George Mendonsa And Greta Friedman
V-J Day in Times Square, which was shot by Alfred Eisenstaedt, is arguably one of the most iconic photographs from World War II. It gained infamy when it was published inLIFEmagazine and became a cultural icon almost instantly. Eisenstaedt claimed that he watched as the sailor grabbed “every female he could find and kiss[ed] them all” before finding his famous nurse.
The subjects’ identity was a mystery for decades after the photograph was published. One of the first women to claim she was the nurse was kindergarten teacher Edith Shain, but at 147 centimeters (4’10″) tall, it was quickly determined that she was too small to be the woman in the photograph. The real nurse wasn’t found until the identity of George Mendonsa was confirmed by matching scars and tattoos. In turn, George identified Friedmanas the nurse he had kissed.
On the day of the photograph, George had been at the cinema with his wife, Rita, who can also be seenin the background of the photograph. The photograph was later criticized as an insensitive depiction of sexual assault, as it was assumed that Greta had not consented to the kiss. Greta denied these allegations, insisting there was “no way there was anything bad about it.”

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:30am On Aug 30, 2014
9: Easy Company
Raising the Flag on Iwo Jimais often cited as the most reproduced photograph in history. There are six men in the photograph: four at the front (Ira Hayes, Franklin Sousley, John Bradley, and Harlon Block) and two at the back (Michael Strank and Rene Gagnon). These men had been part of the division, called Easy Company, that had just captured the mountainfrom the Japanese. It was not the first flag to be raised on Mount Surabachi, but the first one was too small, so Easy Company was ordered to raise a bigger flag“so every son of a b— on this whole cruddy island can see it.”
Three of the men—Strank, Sousley, and Block— died soon afterthe flag was raised. Strank, the eldest of the men, was the first to die, killed by friendly fire. The three survivors—Gagnon, Hayes, and Bradley—handled the attention they received from their participation in the photograph in different ways, some better than others. Hayes became an alcoholic and died 10 years after the end of the war, and Bradley shied away from the publicity and bought a funeral parlor. Gagnon allegedly capitalized on the famebut quickly faded into obscurity, dying from a heart attackin 1979 while working as a janitor.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:33am On Aug 30, 2014
8: Warren ‘Whitey’ Bernard
Wait For Me, Daddywas taken by photographer Claude P. Dettloff on October 1, 1940 in New Westminster, Canada. As he watched the British Columbia Regiment march down the street, a young boy who would later be identified as Warren Bernard ran away from his mother to say goodbye one last time to his father, Jack, who was about to go to war. The photograph was an instant success and hung in every schoolin British Columbia during the war.
Thankfully, Jack Bernard returned home safe after fighting in France, but it wasn’t a completely happy ending. He and his wife, Bernice, had another child on the way when he left for England, and she was not happy about his decision to join up. The pregnancy later ended in miscarriage, and the two divorced soon after the end of the war. Warren, who is now 79, told newspapersthat the marriage “was pretty much over when the war ended” and his father never returned home to live with them. Bernice found work she enjoyed and remarried in 1950, while Jack remarried and had two more children before passing away in 1981 at 75 years old.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:37am On Aug 30, 2014
7: Allan Weaver And Maurice Cullinane
Faith and Confidenceis a Pulitzer Prize–winning photograph from 1958 that was shot by William C. Beall. It depicts a young boy and a policemaninteracting during a Chinese New Year parade in Washington, DC. The photograph was incredibly popular, featured inLIFEmagazine and becoming the logofor the DC Boys Club. The picture was taken as Allan Weaver, who was two years old at the time, was trying to get closer to the colorful Chinese dragon and amazing fireworks of the parade.
At the time, Weaver’s father was stationed in Japan. When Maurice Cullinane leaned down and told him to make sure he didn’t get too close, Weaver asked him if he was a marine. Maurice was relatively new to the police force and had joined because his father, grandfather, and two uncles had all served under it. In 1974, Cullinane became the chief of police, playing a key role in the 1977 Hanafi Siege before retiring the next year. Weaver went on to live a relatively normal life, moving to California and becoming Orson Welles’s personal assistant before settling into his current occupation as a lighting consultant. Both Weaver and Cullinane have the picture hanging in their living rooms.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:40am On Aug 30, 2014
6: Jonathan Briley
The Falling Manbecame a jarring symbol of the events that took place on September 11, 2001. Photographer Richard Drew actually took 12 photosof the man as he fell, but this particular photograph became famous because it depicted the subject falling straight down, almost as if he were diving. It was published inThe New York Timesthe next day.
It has been estimated that over 200 peoplejumped from the World Trade Center that day, most of whom were trapped on the upper floors of the towers. Many also fell or were blown out of the windows. This has made it difficult to identify the subject of the photograph. The first subject suggested was Norberto Hernandez, and three other families claimed they were related to the man, but scientific analysis has discounted these theories.
The most likely candidate is Jonathan Briley, who worked on the 106th floor of the North Tower for Windows of the World and was identified by colleagues, family, and close analysis of the photograph. Briley had previously been a sound engineer and lived in Mount Vernon. He was asthmatic, which means he would have suffered particularly brutally when the smoke from the crash began to rise. He was only 43 years old when he was killed.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:43am On Aug 30, 2014
Ruby Bridges
This photograph was taken outside William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans, Louisiana, which was one of the first schoolsin the Deep South to be integrated after the Brown vs. the Board of Education decision had legally overturned the Jim Crow laws. The photo depicts the school’s only African-American student, Ruby Bridges, being escorted to class by US Marshals.
What the photograph doesn’t show is the large crowd that had gathered outside the school, shouting and throwing rocks at the young girl. Ruby admits that this was a terrifying experience, but one of the deputy marshals in the photograph, Charles Burks, remembers her as far braver than she does. “She showed a lot of courage,” he said. “She never cried. She didn’t whimper. She just marched along like a little soldier, and we’re all very, very proud of her.”
This story of triumph almost never happened. Ruby’s father was afraid of the violence his daughter might encounter at the all-white school and didn’t want her to attend, but her mother convinced him otherwise. White families pulled their children out of the school, and only one teacher, Barbra Henry, agreed to teach Ruby. The US Marshals were dispatched by President Eisenhower himself to ensure the girl’s safety. Ruby had to spend the whole day in the principal’s office and was only allowed to eat food from home, as one white mother had threatened to poison her. She later became an accomplished civil rights activist.

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Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:47am On Aug 30, 2014
4: Zbigniew Religa
This award-winningNational Geographicphotograph taken by James Stanfield in 1987 depicts cardiac surgeon Zbigniew Religa tracking the vitals of a patient after a successful heart transplant while his assistant rests in the corner. The transplant had taken 23 hours, using incredibly outdated technology. At the time, while Poland’s free healthcare system had undoubtedly helped millions of people, it was also straining under a lack of funding.
Religa performed most of his cardiology work and lectured in Warsaw but had also studied in New York and Detroit. He was one of the most renowned cardiologists in Poland and known as a pioneer of medical technology. He performed the first successful heart transplant in the country, and in 1995, he became the first surgeon to graft an artificial valve by creating one from materials that had been taken from human corpses. Religa later left the medical field to become a politician, serving in the Polish senate for 12 years and as the country’s health minister for two. He passed away at age 70 in 2009.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:49am On Aug 30, 2014
3: Evelyn McHale
On May 1, 1947, Evelyn McHale walked 86 floors to the observation deck of the Empire State Building and jumped off. She landed on top of a United Nations limousine with her legs perfectly crossed. Photography student Robert Wiles was walking nearby and captured the image just minutes after McHale died.The Most Beautiful Suicidewas printed 11 days later inLIFEmagazine, gaining instant fame.
McHale was only 23 years old and one of the youngest children in her family. She joined the Women’s Army Corps during the war and then moved to New York Citywith her brother and sister-in-law, where she worked as a bookkeeper. On April 30, she caught a train to Easton to celebrate her fiance’s 24th birthday. When she left, she seemed “happy and as normal as any girl about to be married.” However, when she arrived in New York City that evening, she wrote a suicide notewhich stated “My fiance asked me to marry him in June. I don’t think I would make a good wife for anybody. He is much better off without me.”

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:53am On Aug 30, 2014
2: Larry Wayne Chaffin
This infamous photograph was taken on June 18, 1965 in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. It was shot by famed photographer Horst Faas, who had been traveling throughout Vietnam to capture images of the war. It depicts a soldierof the 173rd Airborne Brigade Battalion, now known to be Larry Wayne Chaffin, with the words “War is Hell” handwritten on his helmet.
Chaffin’s wife, Fran, remembers that when she greeted him at the airport after he was discharged from the Army, Larry had been holding the issue ofStars and Stripesmagazine that had published the photo and remarked that it was going to make him “rich sometime.” Chaffin never had the chance to get rich, unfortunately. After the war, he struggled with post traumatic stress disorder and never fully settled back into civilian life, dying just 20 years later at the age of 39 from complications of diabetes. His family strongly suspectsthat his condition was the result of exposure to Agent Orange during the war.

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Bryan12(m): 11:54am On Aug 30, 2014
I use to think that the 9th picture was depicted from a movie
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 11:56am On Aug 30, 2014
1: The Chalifoux Family
At the time this photograph was taken in Chicago on August 4, 1948, Ray and Lucille Chalifoux were unemployed and facing eviction from their home. With another baby on the way, they couldn’t even afford food for themselves, let alone their children. The children (Lana, Rae, Milton, and Sue Ellen) were not sold, thankfully, and newspapers claimed that job and housing offers poured in after the photo was published in magazines across the US.
Although things seemed to be looking up briefly, the father later abandoned the family. Lucille was only 24, and the next man she dated wanted nothing to do with her kids. Two years later, Lucille’s eldest son, David, was taken away from the home after he was found malnourished and covered in bug bites. The family who adopted him was loving but strict, and he ran away when he was 16 to join the military.
Rae claims shewassold for $2, which was allegedly used for bingo money, while Sue Ellen and Milton were adoptedby a cruel and abusive family. The children were not reunited until they were well into old age, and they have mixed opinionsabout their mother. Sue Ellen, who died of lung cancer shortly after the reunion, said that she hopes her mother was “in hell burning,” whereas David argued “We’re all human beings. We all make mistakes. She could’ve been thinking about the children. Didn’t want them to die.”

Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Nobody: 12:00pm On Aug 30, 2014
Bryan12: I use to think that the 9th picture was depicted from a movie
No, that was taken by American troops during world war 2. Mr Seun and moderators please put this on front page. Thanks.
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Adrenaline123(m): 12:03pm On Aug 30, 2014
That is why it's good to carry your camera around.
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Emmafrancis: 12:10pm On Aug 30, 2014
Mind blowing
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Sparrow13: 12:21pm On Aug 30, 2014
Afghanistan: Ruby Bridges
Ruby admits that this was a terrifying experience, but one of the deputy marshals in the photograph, Charles Burks, remembers her as far braver than she does. “She showed a lot of courage,” he said. “She never cried. She didn’t whimper. She just marched along like a little soldier, and we’re all very, very proud of her.”
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Bryan12(m): 12:25pm On Aug 30, 2014
Adrenaline123: That is why it's good to carry your camera around.
Guess that's why sophisticated mobile phones have camera.
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by Adrenaline123(m): 12:40pm On Aug 30, 2014
Bryan12: Guess that's why sophisticated mobile phones have camera.
yeah, I hav pics of some of my friends doing something extra ordinary, I keep dem in my archive to show them in a years time or more. They would be very surprised grin grin
Re: Stories Of The People Behind Famous Photographs In World History. by angelTI(f): 1:25pm On Aug 30, 2014
Some of these pictures brought tears to my eyes....

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