Tuesday, February 20, 2018



Max Desor, 104, passes away

Won Pulitzer for bridge war photo

Former Associated Press photographer Max Desfor, whose photo of hundreds of Korean War refugees crawling across a damaged bridge in 1950 helped win him a Pulitzer Prize, died Monday. He was 104.

Desfor died at his apartment in Silver Spring, Maryland.

Desfor parachuted into North Korea with U.S troops and retreated with them after forces from the North, joined by the Chinese, pushed south.
Max near the North Korean capital of Pyongyang when he spotted a bridge that had been hit by bombing along the Taedong River. Thousands of refugees were lined up on the north bank waiting their turn to cross the river.

Desfor climbed a 50-foot-high section of the bridge to photograph the refugees as they fled for their lives.
Max Desor

Desfor was born in the Bronx on Nov. 8, 1913, and attended Brooklyn College. He joined the AP in 1933.

During World War II, Desfor photographed the crew of the Enola Gay after the B-29 landed in Saipan from its mission to drop an atomic bomb on Hiroshima in August 1945.

He photographed Mahatma Gandhi and later covered the assassinated leader’s funeral in 1948.

He retired from the AP in 1978, then joined U.S. News & World Report as photo director.

Desfor and his wife, Clara, raised a son, Barry, of Wauconda, Illinois. She died in 2004.

In January 2012, when he was 98, Desfor and his longtime companion, Shirley Belasco, surprised guests at a party celebrating her 90th birthday by marrying in front of their guests. They had been friends since the 1980s.

To read the entire article, click on https://apnews.com/c5ae198557264a049101ce1caf74c3c7  

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