Gibson's most prominent contribution to the world, ‘Iolani Palace in Honolulu, remains revered by native Hawaiian and visited by millions of guests annually. Adjacent to it stands the iconic Kamehameha statue, another vestige of the Gibson administration. Past and current critics insist both are symbols of reckless and irresponsible government yet their enduring cultural value is indisputable. Had Queen Lili’uokalani successfully promulgated her 1893 constitution history would likely recall Walter Murray Gibson much as she did; “Whatever the faults of Mr. Gibson, so long Prime Minister of Kalakaua, he was an able man, and his only public crime was his loyalty to his king. And it was for this reason that he (was) seized by a mob composed of the ‘Missionary Party’ armed with rifles and marched down the public streets to the wharves; not an atom of respect being shown to the gray hairs of the old man who had occupied for years the highest position in the King's cabinet...against whom no charge, political or criminal, was ever made.” Strategically aided by American diplomatic and military interplay, annexationists ruled the day, however, and semblance of Gibson throughout Hawai’i, as well as the kingdom he so loved itself, suffered a meticulously planned and well executed demise by adversaries. Still a pariah in most Latter-Day Saint circles, opinions typically reflect those expressed by Mormon historian
Samuel W. Taylor, who refers to Gibson as an imposter and manipulator of the church and Brigham Young. Speaking less sternly before a congregation in the tabernacle at Salt Lake City, Utah, the Mormon prophet, himself, clarified; “The charge against Walter M. Gibson was not for owning property or for claiming it, for no one cared how much he had, if he only used it for the benefit of the poor who had given it, but the charge was his persistent refusal to be dictated by the Priesthood." Saved from execution by a British diplomat. ==In film==