Background
He was appointed chief upon death of his father, Chief Victor (Many Horses or Plenty-of-Horses).
He was appointed chief upon death of his father, Chief Victor (Many Horses or Plenty-of-Horses).
Chief Victor was a principal signer of the Treaty of Hellgate in 1855. Chief Charlo, like Chief Victor before him, followed a policy of peace with the American settlers in Southwestern Montana and the soldiers at nearby Fort Missoula. In November 1891 Chief Charlo and a small remnant of the Bitterroot Salish were forced by a contingent of troops from Fort Missoula to move from the Bitterroot Valley to the Flathead Reservation.
Victor became head chief upon the death of Chief Charlo on January 10, 1910.
A speech printed in 1876 by Montana newspapers expressed the frustration and betrayal felt by Chief Charlo towards the white settlers and the United States. military and government representatives. In part it read:
The town of Charlo, Montana and Chief Charlo Elementary School, in Missoula, Montana, are named after him.