The American flag Karen Nielsen firmly held in her hands did not look nearly 80 years old.

Still, it was obvious this was a homemade flag. The red material came from a blanket, the white fabric from sheets. And the blue was fashioned from a pair of dungarees worn by a soldier in the Philippines campaign of World War II.

The flagstaff was constructed out of a bamboo prod Japanese soldiers used to herd U.S. prisoners along — and beat them if they disobeyed or lagged behind.

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Karen Nielsen takes a photo Wednesday of Army National Guard Maj. Louis Herrera with the flag Jose Quintero made while a prisoner of war in Japan. Nearly 30 years ago, Quintero gave the flag to Nielsen’s father, Lt. Gen. Edward Baca.

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Jose Quintero, who was captured after U.S. forces surrendered on Corregidor Island in the Philippines in 1942, made this American flag out of blankets, bedsheets and dungarees while he was a prisoner of the Japanese for more than three years during World War II.



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