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Lawrence "Larry" W. Obsitnik
"the Chief"
1919
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1984
Born and lived in Little Rock, Arkansas
Arkansas' first full time paid news photographer.
Lawrence
"Larry" W. Obsitnik was born in Little Rock on December 27, 1919. He
attended Little Rock schools. A boyhood interest in photography
included the opportunity in 1928 to take pictures of presidential
candidate Herbert Hoover in Joliet, Illinois. Graduating from high
school as war clouds gathered in Europe, Obsitnik joined the Arkansas
National Guard.
Because of Obsitnik's interest in and experience with
photography he
was assigned to the Signal Corps Photographic Center on Long Island,
New York for training as a news and combat photographer. On January 6,
1941, he was inducted into federal service as a corporal in Battery A,
206 Coast Artillery (AA). In June 1941 his unit was transferred to
Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands. He was at nearby Morris Cove when
the Japanese attacked Dutch Harbor in early June 1942. In May 1943 he
was transferred to the photographic detachment of the 14th Signal Corps
Service Company at Fort Richardson, Alaska.
After the war Little Rock photographer William Hughes hired
Obsitnik as
an assistant. Through Hughes he received an opportunity to photograph
Arkansas Razorback coach John Barnhill during a football game for the
Arkansas Gazette. The photographs, featured on the newspaper's
front page, created a sensation, and in 1949 Obsitnik became the
Gazette's first full-time photographer. For the next thirty-five
years he worked for the newspaper, becoming known as "the Chief."
Obsitnik's use of unusual camera angles and poses revolutionized
photojournalism in Arkansas. During his career he photographed every
United States president from Harry Truman to Ronald Reagan. He also
photographed Arkansas politicians, public figures, and numerous
celebrities. His 1957 photograph of American paratroopers entering
Little Rock against the backdrop of a billboard reading "Who will build
Arkansas if her own people do not?," taken during the Little Rock
Central desegregation crisis, earned him a Pulitzer Prize nomination.
During his life, Obsitnik married three times. By his
first wife
he had one son and four daughters. His last wife, Nina Obsitnik,
survived him. He died on November 9, 1984.
We welcome you to leave your personal comments about Mr. Obsitnik
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