This mural was installed on the Booker T. Washington building by USC's art professor Gunars Strazdins, with help from his students. He did one in the same style that ran along the side of the Big Star grocery at old Midland Shopping Center, as well.
History about Booker T. Washington High School: From the beginning in 1916 until it's closing in 1974, Booker T. Washington High School was a center for the education and training of young African Americans of Columbia, South Carolina.
The historic school began with elementary grades and became a standard high school in 1924. For many years it was the largest public high school for Blacks in South Carolina, and one of the few schools in the state accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.
The BTW campus was developed in the southeastern section of Columbia at the corner of Marion and Blossom Streets. In 1923, a three-story fireproof building was erected to house the industrial department of the school. An annex containing 12 classrooms, laboratories, cafeteria and auditorium was built onto the main building in 1927. In 1939 a gymnasium and auditorium were added to the campus. A larger shop building was constructed in 1941 to house vocational classes for boys.
One of the underlying factors which aided the school's progress was the dedicated faculty and staff of highly trained men and women who were committed to helping students develop and strengthen their basic skills.
Public school desegregation in the state and the expansion of the University of South Carolina led to the closing of BTW in 1974 and utilization of the school's facilities by USC.
The main classroom building was too old to save and had to be razed, but other buildings on the BTW grounds were used by three departments of the University. Facilities in the cafeteria and hom economics building were utilized by the USC College of Education for its early childhood education program. The locker rooms in the gymnasium, the auditorium and the vocational education building were converted to classrooms and administrative areas for the Art and Theater departments, and into research space for the USC School of Medicine.