Veteran who saw flag raised at Iwo Jima dies aged 102 on way to D-Day commemorations

In this black and white photo, a handful of soldiers in US uniforms are seen against the sky raising a stars and stripes
Mr Persichitti witnessed the raising of the US flag at Iwo Jima from the deck of a US warship - Joe Rosenthal/AP
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He witnessed the raising of the US flag at Iwo Jima, one of the most iconic moments of the Second World War, and survived the bloody campaign against the Japanese in the Far East.

But Robert Persichitti never lived to fulfil his last mission – to pay tribute in Normandy to his fellow soldiers, sailors and airmen who risked all to free Europe from the Nazis.

Mr Persichitti died at the age of 102 on his way to take part in the events commemorating D-Day. With a history of heart problems, he suffered a medical emergency on board a ship sailing to the French beaches.

A doctor played his favourite crooner, Frank Sinatra, on her mobile phone, bringing him a few last moments of peace before he was airlifted to a German hospital, where he died shortly afterwards.

“The doctor was with him. He was not alone – he was at peace and he was comfortable,” said Al De Carlo, one of Mr Persichitti’s friends and fellow veterans.

Robert Persichitti, pictured attending an Iwo Jima reunion in Japan in 2019
Robert Persichitti, pictured attending an Iwo Jima reunion in Japan in 2019 - Mark Gibson/US Marine Corps

Mr Persichitti, from Rochester, in New York State, had travelled to Europe with a group from the US National World War II Museum, determined to visit the beaches where so many of his countrymen fell as they stormed the German defences.

“I’m really excited to be going,” he told WROC-TV in Rochester the day before he left the US, saying his cardiologist had encouraged him to make the trip.

Mr Persichitti served in Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Guam as a radioman second class on the command ship USS Eldorado, and was named in the New York State Senate’s Veterans Hall of Fame in 2020.

In an interview with WDSU TV in New Orleans, he said he had served on a ship in the Pacific for 15 months, helping to handle “all the communications for the two operations – Iwo Jima and Okinawa”.

He was on the deck of the Eldorado when he witnessed the raising of an American flag atop Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima on Feb 23 1945. It was a moment captured by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal in one of the most famous images of the war.

Mr Persichitti recorded what he had seen in his diary. He returned to Mount Suribachi in 2019, telling the US military newspaper Stars and Stripes: “When I got to the island today, I just broke down. They were like kids. They put them out there, 17 or 18 years old. A lot of them never even made the beach.”

During the trip, he recalled seeing some of the terrible injuries suffered by the Marines who were brought on board his ship. “When they made the landing, they started losing all these guys,” he said. “It wasn’t a very good sight.”

Following the Allied victory over Germany and Japan, Mr Persichitti became a carpentry teacher in Rochester. Long after his retirement, he would visit classrooms to pass on his experience of the war to new generations. “It shouldn’t be forgotten,” he would say when asked why he wanted to revisit those experiences.

Pastor William Leone, who had known Mr Persichitti for nearly half a century, said: “It was a privilege to know him, and I will miss him. He had a real zest for living.”

Mr De Carlo said his friend would have had no regrets about attempting his one last mission, adding: “He taught us how to live every day to the fullest and he left his tank empty.”

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