He was city attorney of Detroit 1882–1886 and prepared the first complete charter for Detroit which was passed by the
Michigan State Legislature in 1884. He was also president of the Michigan Lubricator Company and of the Shipman Koal Company of
Pennsylvania. He was also a member of the Detroit Board of Commerce. Corliss was made a
Mason in Union Lodge of Detroit in 1880 and during the ensuing five years became a Chapter and Commandery Mason and attained the thirty-second degree of the Scottish Rite. From 1887 to 1892 he was commander-in-chief of the Michigan Sovereign Consistory and he was one of the promoters of the consolidation of the Masonic order in the Valley of Detroit, resulting in the establishment of the Masonic Temple Association and the building of the Masonic Temple on Lafayette avenue, having exclusive charge of the legislative and legal work. This association owns property to the value of more than a million dollars, title being held by the corporation created for the purpose and controlled by the board of trustees elected by the respective Masonic bodies. In 1890 the honorary thirty-third degree was conferred upon Corliss. For many years he served on the board of trustees of the Temple Association and he has been president of the Old Guard of Detroit Commandery. He was the prime organizer and first president of the Pioneer Association of Michigan Sovereign Consistory and he was also the organizer and first president of the Past Potentates, Moslem Temple. Moslem Temple, the social branch of high degrees of Masonry, was made an active organization during his services in 1887 and 1888, when he was its first active potentate. In 1894, Corliss ran as a
Republican and defeated incumbent
Democrat Levi T. Griffin to be elected as a
United States representative from
Michigan's 1st congressional district to the
Fifty-fourth and to the three succeeding Congresses, serving from March 4, 1895, until March 3, 1903. He served as chairman of the
Committee on Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in the
Fifty-fifth through
Fifty-seventh Congresses. He lost to
Democrat Alfred Lucking in the general election of 1902. ==Retirement and death==