Inside the truck, visitors learn about the history of black players in the game and the League. The Boston Bruins jersey that belonged to Willie O'Ree, the first black player in the NHL, is on display, as is a mask worn by Hall of Fame goalie Grant Fuhr, along with pictures of every black player to appear in an NHL game, sample locker stalls and timelines of achievements.
"People are really enjoying what they're seeing and what they're discovering," said Damon Kwame Mason, who directed the 2015 documentary "Soul on Ice: Past, Present, and Future," chronicling the history of black hockey. "It's really interesting when you tell somebody that the first organized sport for blacks was hockey. They assume it's got to be football; they assume it's got to be baseball.
"Before the Negro Baseball Leagues there was the Coloured Hockey League of the Maritimes. That's 1895 to 1930, and it's not like they just started skating in 1895, they were skating and playing hockey long before that. These are kids that were next generation slaves from Canada."
Mason, a mainstay of the NHL Black Hockey History Tour and native of Toronto, said he sees a great opportunity.
"Seattle is in a very unique position in that they can be the trend-setters," Mason said. "They can be the ones to set the tone from the very beginning. They can go into not just the black community, but the Hispanic community, the Asian community, all communities to let them know they are welcome to the sport. Because that's the only way the game is going to grow, and that's the only way the game is going to be better."