Unveiled:
November 10th, 1954
Size:
The 32-foot-high figures are shown erecting a 60-foot bronze
flagpole from which a cloth flag flies 24 hours a day in
accordance with Presidential proclamation of June 12, 1961.
The figures, placed on a rock slope, rise about 6 feet from
a 10-foot base, making the memorial 78 feet high overall.
The M-l rifle and the carbine carried by two of the figures
are 16 and 12 feet long, respectively. The canteen would
hold 32 quarts of water.

Who
is who?:. Pfc. Ira Hayes is the figure farthest from
the flag staff Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley to the right front
of Hayes Sgt. Michael Strank on Sousley's left PhM. 2/c
John Bradley in front of Sousley Pfc. Rene A. Gagnon in
front of Strank Cpl. Harland H. Block closest to the bottom
of the flagstaff.
Felix de Weldon working on the image of J. Bradley
Cost:
The entire cost of the statue and developing the memorial
site was $850,000--all donated by U.S. Marines, former Marines,
Marine Corps Reservists, friends of the Marine Corps, and
members of the Naval Service. No public funds were used
for this memorial.
Location:
The U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial is administered by the
National Park Service, it is located in Arlington Va.
Materials:
Bronze. The base of the memorial is made of rough Swedish
granite.
Inscription: Burnished in gold on the granite are
the names and dates of every principal Marine Corps engagement
since the founding of the Corps, as well as the inscription:
"In honor and in memory of the men of the United States
Marine Corps who have given their lives to their country
since November 10, 1775." Also inscribed on the base is
the tribute of Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz to the fighting
men on Iwo Jima: "Uncommon Valor was a Common Virtue."