Walter A. Rosenblum (October 1, 1919 â January 23, 2006) was an American photographer known for his street photography in New York, his service as a U.S. Army Signal Corps combat cameraman during World War II, and his decades-long career as a photography educator. His work is held in the collections of major institutions, including the Museum of Modern Art and the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Rosenblum was born on October 1, 1919, in New York City to Romanian Jewish immigrants. He grew up on New YorkâÂÂs Lower East Side.
While at City College, he learned about the New York Photo League, a collective dedicated to social documentary photography. He became an active member, studying with Lewis Hine and Paul Strand, who became a lifelong friend and mentor, and holding several leadership roles, including editor of Photo Notes and president. He also taught photography courses there during the 1940s.
He began with street photography through the Photo League and became known for documenting scenes of urban life with empathy and clarity. His first major photo essay, âÂÂPitt Streetâ (1938), was created when Rosenblum was just 19, while working under Sid Grossman, director of the Photo League school. Set in a Lower East Side tenement neighborhood, the series documents working-class life during the Great Depression. Featuring portraits such as Girl on a Swing and Children Playing Cards, it acknowledges the hardships of the area's residents while focusing on their sense of community and resilience.
During World War II, Rosenblum enlisted in the U.S. Army and served as a combat photographer with the 162nd Signal Photographic Company. He photographed D-Day landing at Normandy in 1944, documented fighting through France and Germany, and was among the first Allied photographers to enter the liberated Dachau concentration camp in the spring of 1945.
Rosenblum's honors include a Silver Star, Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Presidential Unit Citation, 5 battle stars and an arrowhead device. His combat photography from the war has been widely recognized for its technical and documentary significance.
His wartime photography is in collections of museums around the world.
After the war, Rosenblum continued his socially conscious photography, documenting refugee relief efforts in postwar France and Czechoslovakia for the Unitarian Service Committee. He became a dedicated educator in 1947, teaching for several decades at Brooklyn College. He also taught at the Yale Summer School of Music and Art from 1952 to 1976, Cooper Union from 1956 to 65, and lectured internationally.
He continued to document communities from the Gaspé Peninsula in Quebec to Haiti and back to his American street photography in East Harlem and the South Bronx.
Rosenblum's career spanned over seven decades, leaving a legacy of documenting everyday life with dignity, clarity, and empathy.
He was married to Naomi Rosenblum, a prominent photographic historian and author of The World History of Photography and A History of Women Photographers. The couple were active in New YorkâÂÂs mid-20th-century photography community and collaborated on exhibitions and publications.
They had two daughters: Lisa, a former executive in the communications industry, and Nina, a documentary filmmaker.
Rosenblum died January 23, 2006.
Two documentary films have examined RosenblumâÂÂs life and photographic legacy.
Walter Rosenblum: In Search of Pitt Street (1999), directed by his daughter, Nina Rosenblum, is a feature-length documentary that chronicles his life as a photographer, educator, and World War II combat cameraman. It explores his early involvement with the Photo League, his street photography on New YorkâÂÂs Lower East Side, and his military documentation of major events including the DâÂÂDay landings and the liberation of Dachau.
The 2025 film, They Fight With Cameras, was directed by Nina Rosenblum and Daniel Allentuck, and narrated by Liev Schreiber. Focusing on RosenblumâÂÂs service as a U.S. Army Signal Corps cameraman, it draws on archival footage, photographs, and personal letters to document his experience during World War II.