
There are six Flag Raisers on the photo. Four in the
front line and two in back.
The front four are (left to right) Ira Hayes, Franklin
Sousley, John Bradley and Harlon Block.
The back two are Michael Strank
(behind Sousley) and Rene Gagnon (behind Bradley).
Strank, Block and Sousley would die shortly afterwards.
Bradley, Hayes and Gagnon became national heroes within
weeks.
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Ira
Hayes January 12, 1923 January 24, 1955
Ira Hamilton Hayes is a full blood Pima Indian
and was born in Sacaton, Arizona, on the Pima Reservation
on Jan 12, 1923. His parents Joe E. and Nancy W. Hayes were
both farming people.
When he enlisted in the Marine Corps, he had
hardly ever been off the Reservation. His Chief told him
to be an "Honorable Warrior" and bring honor upon
his family. Ira was a dedicated Marine. Quiet and steady,
he was admired by his fellow Marines who fought alongside
him in three Pacific battles.
Ira Hayes was a noted World War ll hero. Although he had
a normal childhood on his reservation, his life changed
dramatically when war broke out and he joined the Marine
Corps. After he completed courses under the U.S. Marine
Corps Parachutist School at San Diego, California. He was
lovingly dubbed "Chief Falling Cloud." Ira Hayes
was assigned to a parachute battalion of the fleet Marine
Force.
By the beginning
of 1945, he was part of the American invasion force that
attacked the Japanese stronghold of Iwo Jima. On Feb. 23,
1945 to signal the end of Japanese control, Hayes and five
other's raised the U. S. flag atop Mount Suribuchi on the
island of Iwo Jima. Three of the six men were killed while
raising the flag. This heroic act was photographed by Joe
Rosenthal, and it transformed Ira Hayes' life for ever.
Subsequently a commemorative postage stamp was created as
well as bronze statue in Washington DC.
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President
Franklin D. Roosevelt called the brave survivors of the
flag raising back to the United States to aid a war bond
drive. At the White House, President Truman told Ira, "You
are an American hero." But Ira didn't feel pride. As
he later lamented, "How could I feel like a hero when
only five men in my platoon of 45 survived, when only 27
men in my company of 250 managed to escape death or injury?"
Later, they were shuttled from one city to another for publicity
purposes with questionable sincerity on the part of the
American military. Ira Hayes asked to be sent back to the
front lines, stating that "sometimes I wish that guy
had never made that picture".
The Bond Tour
was an ordeal for Ira. He couldn't understand or accept
the adulation . . . "It was supposed to be soft duty,
but I couldn't take it. Everywhere we went people shoved
drinks in our hands and said 'You're a Hero!' We knew we
hadn't done that much but you couldn't tell them that."

He now lies in Section 34
of Arlington National Cemetery. |
At the conclusion
of World War II Ira went back to the reservation attempting
to lead an anonymous life. But it didn't turn out that way
. . . "I kept getting hundreds of letters. And people
would drive through the reservation, walk up to me and ask,
'Are you the Indian who raised the flag on Iwo Jima"
Ira tried
to drown his "Conflict of Honor" with alcohol.
Arrested as drunk and disorderly, his pain was clear . .
. "I was sick. I guess I was about to crack up thinking
about all my good buddies. They were better men than me
and they're not coming back. Much less back to the White
House, like me."
He was never able to get
his life back in balance again. Ira Hayes died of exposure
at the age of thirty-three on Jan, 24th 1955. He was memoralized
by the Pima people and characterized as "a hero to
everyone but himself". He is buried in Arlington Cemetery.
He never married. 
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