Background
Jorgensen was born in Portland, Oregon.
Jorgensen was born in Portland, Oregon.
He attended the University of Oregon and Reed College, graduating in 1936.
Both photographs were of the same V-J Day embrace of a woman in a white dress by a sailor. Eisenstaedt"s better known photograph, V-J Day in Times Square was published in Life. On the day after the images were taken by the two photographers, the one taken by Jorgensen was published in The New York Times.
His photograph, which was taken while he was on duty, is retained in the National Archives and Records Administration.
After college, he joined the staff of The Oregonian, working his way up from copy boy to night city editors During his time at the newspaper, he became interested in photography and by the advent of World World War II he was becoming a respected photographer.
In 1942, Jorgensen enlisted in the Navy and was one of six initial photographers recruited by Edward Steichen to join the Naval Aviation Photographic Unit during the war. He served aboard aircraft carriers United States Ship Lexington in the Gilbert Islands (fall 1943).
The United States Ship Monterey in the Mariana Islands (1944).
Destroyer United States Ship Albert West. Grant and shore duty in Borneo and the Philippines during Douglas MacArthur"s return in 1944. And the hospital ship United States Ship Solace off Okinawa, spring 1945. While aboard the United States Ship Monterey, he captured Navy pilots in the forward elevator well of the ship playing basketball during June 1944.
One of the subjects, the jumper of the left, is Gerald Ford, who later became the president of the United States upon the resignation of Richard Nixon.
On V J Day, 1945, both Jorgensen and Eisenstaedt captured the image of a United States. sailor grabbing a nurse for an impromptu kiss in the midst of Times Square celebrations. In a 2010 article, The New York Times described it as "a defining image of the American century, one that expressed the joy of a nation at its moment of greatest triumph."
Jorgensen served as president of the American Society of Media Photographers, working to establish minimum pay scales and fair practices for the photography industry.
After he left the Navy, Jorgensen settled in Maryland. He took over Chesapeake Skipper magazine, renaming it The Skipper and boosted its subscriptions from 1,500 to 50,000 by 1968.