POW/MIA Flag History
In 1971, Mrs. Mary Hoff, an MIA wife and member of the National League of American
Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia, recognized the need for a symbol of our
POW/MIAs. Prompted by an article in the Jacksonville, Florida TIMES-UNION, Mrs.
Hoff contacted Norman Rivkees, Vice-President of Annin & Company which had made
a banner for the newest member of the United Nations, the People's Republic of China,
as a part of their policy to provide flags to all UN member nations. Mrs. Hoff found
Mr. Rivkees very sympathetic to the POW/MIA issue, and he, along with Annin's advertising
agency, designed a flag to represent our missing men. Following League approval,
the flags were manufactured for distribution.
The flag is black, bearing in the center, in black and white, the emblem of the
League. The emblem is a white disk bearing in black silhouette the bust of a man,
watch tower with a guard holding a rifle, and a strand of barbed wire; above the
disk are the white letters POW and MIA framing a white 5-pointed star; below the
disk is a black and white wreath above the white motto YOU ARE NOT FORGOTTEN.
Concerned groups and individuals have altered the original POW/MIA Flag many times;
the colors have been switched from black with white to red, white and blue, to white
with black; the POW/MIA has at times been revised to MIA/POW. Such changes, however,
are insignificant. The importance lies in the continued visibility of the symbol,
a constant reminder of the plight of America's POW/MIA'S.
On March 9,1989 a POW/MIA Flag, which flew over the White House on the 1988 National
POW/MIA Recognition Day, was installed in the United States Capitol Rotunda as a
result of legislation passed overwhelmingly during the 100th session of Congress.
The leadership of both Houses hosted the installation ceremony in a demonstration
of bipartisan congressional support. This POW/MIA Flag, the only flag displayed
in the United States Capitol Rotunda, stands as a powerful symbol of our national
commitment to our POW/MIAs until the fullest possible accounting for Americans still
missing in Southeast Asia has been achieved.
The National League of Families POW/MIA flag is the only flag ever displayed in
the U.S. Capitol Rotunda where it will stand as a powerful symbol of national commitment
to America's POW/MIAs until the fullest possible accounting has been achieved for
U.S. personnel still missing and unaccounted for from the Vietnam War.
On August 10, 1990, the 101st Congress passed U.S. Public Law 101-355, which recognized
the League's POW/MIA flag and designated it "as the symbol of our Nation's concern
and commitment to resolving as fully as possible the fates of Americans still prisoner,
missing and unaccounted for in Southeast Asia, thus ending the uncertainty for their
families and the Nation".
The importance of the League's POW/MIA flag lies in its continued visibility, a
constant reminder of the plight of America's POW/MIAs. Other than "Old Glory", the
League's POW/MIA flag is the only flag ever to fly over the White House, having
been displayed in this place of honor on National POW/MIA Recognition Day since
1982. With passage of Section 1082 of the 1998 Defense Authorization Act during
the first term of the 105th Congress, the League's POW/MIA flag will fly each year
on Armed Forces Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day, National POW/MIA
Recognition Day and Veterans Day on the grounds or in the public lobbies of major
military installations as designated by the Secretary of the Defense, all Federal
national cemeteries, the national Korean War Veterans Memorial, the National Vietnam
Veterans Memorial, the White House, the United States Postal Service post offices
and at the official offices of the Secretaries of State, Defense and Veteran's Affairs,
and Director of the Selective Service System