Marine Corps War Memorial, monument in Arlington county, Va., honouring the members of the United States Marine Corps who have served and died in defense of the United States since the founding of the Corps in 1775. The memorial is located near Arlington National Cemetery. It was designed by Horace W. Peaslee and was dedicated on Nov. 10, 1954.
The monument consists of a large sculpture group on a circular base. The sculpture was inspired by an iconic World War II photograph taken by Joe Rosenthal of six men (five Marines and a U.S. Navy hospital corpsman) raising an American flag atop Mount Suribachi on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima on Feb. 23, 1945, during the battle with the Japanese for the island. Sculptor Felix W. de Weldon was commissioned by the U.S. Congress to cast a much larger than life-size (32-foot [10-metre]) sculpture of the group in bronze to serve as the Marine Corps War Memorial. The three surviving members of the group posed for de Weldon, and the sculptor used photographs as source material for the faces of the three others, who died in the fighting.
The figure group stands atop a jumble of rocks (representing the summit of Suribachi), planting, at an angle, a bronze flagpole 60 feet (18 metres) long into the rocks. A cloth U.S. flag flies constantly from the flagpole. This assemblage sits on top of a base 10 feet (3 metres) high and weighing 700 tons that is made of concrete faced with granite. Inscribed in the granite are the names and dates of the principal Marine engagements since the founding of the Corps and a quotation from Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, a tribute to those who fought on Iwo Jima: “Uncommon valor was a common virtue.” The overall height of the monument, including the base, is 78 feet (24 metres).