From
Merriam-Webster Online
In
the late 19th century, as pro-independence sentiment grew in the
Caribbean islands under Spanish dominion, many activists in Cuba and
Puerto Rico were exiled to the United States or elsewhere. In New York
City a flag was chosen in exile by the Puerto Rican section of the Cuban
Revolutionary Party on December 22, 1895. The design was simply the
Cuban flag with a reversal of the red and blue colors. In turn the Cuban
flag had been derived from the United States flag in its choice of
colors, use of stripes, and emphasis on a white star against a
distinctive colored background. There have been two claimants to the
honor of designing the Puerto Rican flag. Some insist that Antonio Vélez
Alvarado conceived the flag, and that it was sewn by Micaela Dalmau de
Carreras, while others point to Manuel de Besosa as the designer and his
daughter Mima as the seamstress.
During U.S. administration, of Puerto Rico following the
Spanish-American War (1898), the flag was frequently treated as a
revolutionary provocation. The attachment of Puerto Ricans to the
design, however, guaranteed its official recognition on July 25, 1952,
when Puerto Rico officially became a commonwealth associated with the
United States. The flag is widely used today by Puerto Ricans in New
York and other American cities. The star is described as representing
the commonwealth, and the white stripes stand for human rights and the
freedom of the individual. The three red stripes and the three corners
of the triangle correspond to the legislative, executive, and judicial
branches of the government.