Saturday, August 10, 2019

The Picture of the Last Man to Die

Mistico Dois: ←Created page with ''''''The Picture of the Last Man to Die''''' was a photograph taken by Robert Capa during the battle for Leipzig, representing an American soldier, Ray...'


'''''The Picture of the Last Man to Die''''' was a photograph taken by [[Robert Capa]] during the battle for [[Leipzig]], representing an American soldier, [[Raymond J. Bowman]], aged 21 years old, after being killed by a German sniper, on 18 April 1945, shortly before the end of [[World War II]] in [[Europe]].<ref>[https://ift.tt/2KsexTv American soldier killed by German snipers in Leipzig, 1945, Rare Historical Photos]</ref>

==History==
The picture represents [[Raymond J. Bowman]], an American soldier born in [[Rochester]], [[New York City|New York]], who had arrived to [[Great Britain]] in January 1944, in preparation for the [[Operation Overlord]]. After his landing, he served and was wounded in [[France]], on 3 August 1944. He also served in [[Belgium and Germany]]. He reached the rank of private first class during this time. He was a member of a platoon of machine gunners who entered a building in [[Leipzig]], and set positions to cover foot soldiers of the U.S. 2nd Infantry who were arriving to a bridge. Soldiers Bowman and Clarence Ridgeway took positions in an open balcony with a clear view of the bridge. One fired the gun, while the other soldier fed it. Ridgeway came inside, leaving Bowman alone firing the gun. When he was reloading the gun, he was shot in the forehead by a snipers bullet who came from the street below and he crumpled in the floor, already dead.

War photographer [[Robert Capa]] climbed through the balcony window to the flat, where he took a picture of the dead soldier, who layed in the open door, still with the Lufftwave sheepskin he had looted on his head. He took other pictures who show how his blood spread on the flooer, while other soldiers attended to him and to his fellow gunner.

The photographs were published on the ''[[Life (magazine)|Life]]'' magazine on 14 May 1945, shortly after [[Germany]] surrender, with the caption ''The Picture of the Last Man to Die'', which became his official title. They became some of the most iconic images of the [[World War II]].

Two years later, Capa said in a interview that “It was a very clean, somehow very beautiful death and I think that’s what I remember most from the war”.

On 17 April 2016, [[Leipzig]] renamed the Jahnallee 61 street, in front of the apartment where Bowman was killed as Bowmanstraße (Bowman Street). The apartmanet was saved from demolition and renamed Robert Capa House, and now helds a memorial with Robert Capa pictures and information on Private Bowman.<ref>[https://ift.tt/2bFNjHF Leipzig flat made famous in Capa war photo becomes poignant memorial, 1 September 2016]</ref>

==References==





[[Category:Conflicts in 1945]]
[[Category|1945 in Germany]]
[[Category:Battles of World War II involving Germany]]
[[Category:1945 works]]
[[Category:1945 in art]]
[[Category:Black-and-white photographs]]
[[Category:World War II photographs]]
[[Category:1940s photographs]]


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