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“This was a very emotional moment for MacArthur and he wanted to let the Filipinos know he had set foot on their land.”

   Charles Rosario Restifo
Image of Charles Rosario Restifo
Charles Restifo, South Pacifc Signal Corps Photographic Compound [detail]
War: World War II, 1939-1946
Branch: Army
Unit: 161st Photographic Company, Army Signal Corps
Service Location: Fort Benning, Georgia; Pacific Theater; Philippines; Japan
Rank: Staff Sergeant
Place of Birth: New York, NY
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Armed with a camera, professional photographer turned soldier Charles Restifo waded into some of the most intense action in the Pacific Theater of World War II. His job was to record the war in pictures, and for much of his time in service, he had an irresistible subject: the flamboyant and controversial General Douglas MacArthur. Restifo was there when MacArthur made his triumphant return to the islands, but more importantly, he brought back rare pictures of actual combat and was one of the first photographers allowed into Hiroshima after August 6, 1945.

  Photos
»Photo Album (26 photos)
 Memoirs
»The Autobiography of Charles R. Restifo
 Personal Correspondence
»View List (8 items)
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»Voices of War
»The War
 Personal Correspondence (8 items)
Postcard from Charles Restifo to Mr. T. Restifo, August 25, 1942. Postcard from Charles Restifo to Rose and Tony, March 19, 1943. Letter to Rose and Tony, March 11, 1943.
Letter to Mother, August 15, 1943. Letter to "Folks", April 5, 1944. Letter to "Folks", April 24, 1944.
Letter to "Folks," May 9, 1945. Letter to "Folks," September 2, 1945. 
  
 
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  The Library of Congress
  May 29, 2007
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