Heisley was born in
Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on November 9, 1920. He lived with his grandparents for much of his youth, following the death of his mother when he was four-years old. He attended
Syracuse University, graduating with a degree in
fine arts, after which he worked as a graphic artist for the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He enlisted during World War II, serving as a pilot in the
United States Army Air Forces.
Graphic design and the POW/MIA flag After the completion of his military service, Heisley spent more than two decades working at advertising firms in the New York City area. In 1971, a
New Jersey–based agency he worked for assigned him to create a flag for their client
Annin & Company, the largest flag manufacturer in the United States, which had been given the task to create the flag by Mary Hoff, the wife of Lt. Commander Michael Hoff U.S.N., (a service member missing in action) and a member of the
National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia. "You Are Not Forgotten", the words that appear on the bottom of the flag, came to Heisley as he recalled his military experience as a pilot flying lengthy missions on
C-47 Skytrain transport planes over the
South Pacific with the thought coming to his mind that he could end up "being taken prisoner and being... forgotten". Heisley recalled in 1997 that the flag had only been "intended for a small group" and that "No one realized it was going to get national attention". He had designed the flag selflessly "for the men who were prisoners of war or missing in action. They're the real heroes." He was proud of his efforts in its creation but embarrassed by the notice that arose from his involvement. In 1988, the POW/MIA flag flew over the
White House for the first time and it was installed on permanent display in the rotunda of the
United States Capitol in 1989. In 1990, the
United States Congress designated the flag Heisley designed as "the symbol of our nation's concern" for soldiers still unaccounted for in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War, specifying six days each year—
Armed Forces Day,
Memorial Day,
Flag Day,
Independence Day,
National POW/MIA Recognition Day and
Veterans Day—when it is mandated to fly the flag at all military establishments and federal buildings. He decided to move with his family away from the big city and decided to relocate to
Colorado Springs, Colorado, after stopping there one night and seeing the view the next morning. There he opened an advertising firm with his son Jim in 1972. Among the projects his agency worked on was the design of a pin for the
1980 Winter Olympics held in
Lake Placid, New York.
Personal After years of deteriorating health, Heisley died at age 88 on May 14, 2009, in his home in Colorado Springs, a week before he had planned to marry his fiancée, Donna Allison. He was survived by two sons and a granddaughter. Heisley's first wife, Bunny, whom he had met while in college, died in 2005. ==References==