Duane Broten was 20 years old when he was captured by North Koreans who overran his U.S. Army regiment during intense fighting at Pork Chop Hill in what is now South Korea. The sergeant lay wounded in the trenches, drifting in and out of consciousness due to loss of blood from 27 shrapnel wounds.
When he was unable to walk with his captors to a POW camp, they apparently figured he'd die. So they left him lying on his back in a torn-up trench as the fighting continued. Five days later, he made a harrowing, now-or-never escape. That was on July 10, 1953, days before the war ended.
Due to Army paperwork mistakes and records lost for decades, officials said, the Roseau, Minn., native never received official recognition for being a prisoner of war.
On Sunday, U.S. Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., pinned a long-overdue bronze POW Medal to the lapel of a tearful Broten at a celebration attended by his family members as well as other veterans at the State Capitol.
"I want to thank my Lord and Savior for keeping me safe" during captivity, an emotional Broten read from notes before choking up. "I said many, many silent prayers."
"Your prayers were answered, you spent six months in the hospital and you made it home," Franken said. "I want to thank you for your courageous service. We are forever, ever in your debt."
Broten, now 80 and living in Princeton, Minn., said: "I didn't know until about a year and a half ago that there even was a POW Medal."
He had received a Purple Heart for his injuries, which left him with poor vision in one eye, a missing finger and a serious shoulder injury.