By hello
Style: Political memorial mural rooted in Black liberation history. Painted in 1970 by Dion Henderson and commissioned by the Seattle chapter of the Black Panther Party, this wall is less a tourist backdrop than a document of movement history. The retaining wall survived even after the party headquarters beside it was demolished, which gives the site an especially charged presence: the neighborhood changed, but the mural remained. The wall is dedicated to nine fallen Panthers and carries the weight of the Central District's Black political and cultural life. It was retouched in 2008 by artist Eddie Walker, linking generations of local activism and public art. This is a place where muralism functions as remembrance, testimony, and neighborhood self-definition.