In April 1863, Gustav Sohon and Julianna Groh were married. For a brief time they lived in
San Francisco, where Sohon ran a photography studio. Several years later, they returned to Washington, DC, where Sohon disappeared from public life, running a shoe business and raising a large family with Julianna. He died on September 9, 1903. Sohon's artistic abilities place him the same league with such other, better-known Western artists as
George Catlin,
Paul Kane, and
Karl Bodmer. As an artist, Sohon was a product of his time and his depictions of treaty events reflect this. His drawings and watercolor paintings allow everyone who views them to see, through his eyes, the treaty councils between the United States Government and Indian tribes of the Pacific Northwest. ==Notes==