This Week / Home
Search Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
Home About Us Fun & Travel Education Contact Us Sponsors Advanced Search
5495 HistoryLink.org essays now available      
Donate Subscribe

Shortcuts

Libraries
Cyberpedias Cyberpedias
Timeline Essays Timeline Essays
People's Histories People's Histories

Selected Collections
Cities & Towns Cities & Towns
County Thumbnails County Thumbnails
Biographies Biographies
Interactive Cybertours Interactive Cybertours
Slide Shows Slide Shows

Research Shortcuts

Map Searches
Alphabetical Search
Timeline Date Search
Topic Search
Links

Features

History Bytes
Book of the Fortnight
History Bookshelf
Past/Forward Calendar
Klondike Gold Rush Database
Duvall Newspaper Index
Wellington Scrapbook

More History

Washington FAQs
Washington Milestones
Honor Rolls
Columbia Basin
Everett
Olympia
Seattle
Spokane
Tacoma
Walla Walla
Roads & Rails

History Networking

Facebook Facebook
Twitter Twitter
   

Timeline Library

< Browse to Previous Essay | Browse to Next Essay >

Artist Gustavus Sohon documents the Walla Walla treaty council in May, 1855.

HistoryLink.org Essay 8595 : Printer-Friendly Format

In May 1855, Gustavus Sohon (1825-1903) documents important scenes at the Walla Walla treaty council conducted by Governor Isaac Stevens (1818-1862) and General Joel Palmer, the Superintendents of Indian Affairs for Washington Territory and Oregon Territory. Sohon also sketches portraits of key figures at the council, including members of the Cayuse, Nez Perce, Palus, Umatilla, Walla Walla, and Yakama tribes. Sohon arrived on the Columbia River in 1852 as a private in the U.S. Army, and during the following decade, accompanied four expeditions across Eastern Washington. A man of many talents, Sohon serves as a guide, an interpreter, an explorer, and a cartographer, but he is best known as a self-taught artist whose surviving pencil sketches and watercolors of important figures and landmarks comprise valuable eyewitness records of a crucial transitional period in Inland Northwest history.

Intelligent and Faithful

During the spring of 1855, Governor Isaac Stevens, in his role as Superintendent of Indian Affairs for Washington Territory (present-day Washington, Idaho, and western Montana), had completed treaties with the Western Washington tribes and was preparing to negotiate with the Columbia Plateau and Rocky Mountain tribes under his supervision. Accompanying the governor on his tour of the Inland Northwest was a soldier named Gustavus Sohon, “a very intelligent, faithful, and appreciative man … who had shown great taste as an artist, and ability to learn the Indian language” (Stevens, 12:196).

The first of the Eastern Washington treaty councils took place in the Walla Walla Valley. On May 24, 1855, in a dynamic pencil sketch, Sohon recorded the ceremonial arrival of hundreds of Nez Perce Indians and their reception by the American officials. “Soon their calvacade [sic] came in sight, a thousand warriors mounted on fine horses and riding at a gallop, two abreast. They halted while the head chief, Lawyer, and two other chiefs rode slowly forward, dismounted and shook hands with the commissioners” (H. Stevens, II: 35).

Documenting An Historic Event

The next day Sohon documented the goodwill feast served by Stevens and Palmer to an assemblage of Nez Perce chiefs under an arbor built to shelter the diners.  A young lieutenant who visited the Nez Perce camp that same afternoon to pay his respects to Chief Lawyer wrote, “We found the old chief surrounded by his family and reading a portion of the New Testament, while a German soldier of Governor Stevens’ party was engaged taking his portrait in crayon. He afterwards presented me with a copy, which I keep as a memento of these pleasant days in the wilderness” (Kip, appendix).

Representatives from other Plateau tribes soon swelled the council, and over the next three weeks, Sohon was busy with pencil and pen. He rendered likenesses of tribal observers from the Spokane and Kettle Falls tribes, as well as many of the Cayuse, DesChutes, Nez Perce, Umatilla, Walla Walla, and Yakama leaders as they negotiated the future of their homelands. His pencil captured not only those chiefs who favored a treaty, but also its most vocal opponents. His sketchbook included the only known image of Kamiakin, drawn on June 7, the same day that the young Yakama chief, tormented by the choice before him, declined to speak to the council.

Stevens, Palmer, and the leaders of the attending tribes eventually reached a compromise, and by June 11, 1855, three separate treaties ceding almost 60,000 square miles of land had been signed. The only surviving images of this signal event are two Sohon sketches showing six young Nez Perce seated on the ground with pens, paper, and inkwell in hand. They are both labeled “Nez Perce Indians preparing the records of the Walla Walla Council June 1855.”

Sources:
Lawrence Kip, Army Life on the Pacific (New York: Redfield, 1859); Hazard Stevens, Life of Isaac Ingalls Stevens by His Son, 2 vols. (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1901); Isaac Stevens, Reports of Explorations and Surveys to Ascertain the Most Practicable and Economical Route for a Railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, Vols. 1 and 12 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Congress, Senate Executive Document 46, 1860).

More information: < Browse to Previous Essay | Browse to Next Essay > | Search |
Related Topics: American Indians | Arts |

Major Support for HistoryLink.org Provided By: The State of Washington | Patsy Bullitt Collins | Paul G. Allen Family Foundation | Museum Of History & Industry | 4Culture (King County Lodging Tax Revenue) | City of Seattle | City of Bellevue | City of Tacoma | King County | The Peach Foundation | Microsoft Corporation, Other Public and Private Sponsors and Visitors Like You

This file made possible by:
The State of Washington
Washington State Department of Archeology and Historic Preservation


The Nez Perce Coming for the Walla Walla Council, May 24, 1855
Drawing by Gustavus Sohon, Courtesy Smithsonian Institution


Feasting the Chiefs at Walla Walla, May 25, 1855
Drawing by Gustavus Sohon, Courtesy Smithsonian Institution


Nez Perce Indians preparing the records of the Walla Walla Council, June 1855
Drawing by Gustavus Sohon, Courtesy Smithsonian Institution


 
Home About Us Fun & Travel Education Contact Us Sponsors Advanced Search

HistoryLink.org is the first online encyclopedia of local and state history created expressly for the Internet. (SM)
HistoryLink.org is a free public and educational resource produced by History Ink, a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt corporation.

USO Clubs in Tacoma Sponsor of the Week History Bytes