Last modified: 2004-10-30 by dov gutterman
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Puerto Rico marched with the US flag and with a unknown flag
as seen in this photo. You
have an idea of which flag it is?
Fabio Montermini, 15 October 2004
I saw a similar flag (could be the same) flown during an
olympic parade. it was white with a seal
in the middle and the full name of puerto rico at the top.
Marc Pasquin, 19 October 2004
The Official Report of the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki at
<www.aafla.com>
states: "....Puerto Rico after having used the U.S.A. flag
on the arrival of her team in Helsinki, acquired while the Games
were in progress the national flag to which her new independence
entitled her."
Fabio Montermini, 21 October 2004
by Blas Delgado Ortiz, 21 August 2001
I'm presenting you very proudly the flag of our local soccer
association of the PR central region, with headquarters at my
city of Caguas. It is called the Puerto Rico Soccer Central
Association (A.C.B.P.R. - Asociación Central de Balompié de
Puerto Rico.) It was founded in 1980, at Caguas by Prof. Mickey
Jiménez.
The flag is a light orange - white - yellow vertical triband of
equal widths, with the Association logo at the center of the
white band. The logo consists of a typical Spanish shield, square
at the top and semicircular at the bottom, quartered by a double
cross of equal lengths, white the top one over a very dark blue
one, the last thrice the width of the first. The first and third
quarters are dark gray; the second and fourth quarters light
blue. At the center of the cross is a typical soccer ball, with
white hexagons and very dark blue pentagons, in such a position
that an upright pentagon is facing forward. At the top of the
shield, at its right and left extremes, are two very dark blue
small solid circles, and between them is written in capital
letters "FUNDADA EN 1980" (founded in 1980). Above it,
in very large capital letters, defaced by four white lines in
descending order of width and starting at the center of the
letters, is written "ACBPR" (the Association's Spanish
initials.) Bordering the shield from its upper right side through
its upper left side are the words "ASOCIACION CENTRAL DE
BALOMPIE DE PUERTO RICO." All the letters are in very dark
blue color.
The Association is really a big social arena - or oratorial, as
Prof. Jiménez likes to say - focused in pulling young children
and adolescents away from t