In the first regularly elected administration, President Houston appointed Rusk secretary of war, but after a few weeks, Rusk resigned to take care of pressing domestic problems. At the insistence of friends, however, he represented Nacogdoches in the Second Congress of the Republic (1837–1838). Rusk was a
mason. He joined Milam Lodge No. 40 (Later Milam Lodge #2) in Nacogdoches in 1837 and was a founding member of the Grand Lodge of Texas, organized in
Houston on December 20, 1837. As chairman of the House Military Committee in 1837, he sponsored a
militia bill that passed over Houston's veto, and Congress elected Rusk
major general of the
militia. In the summer of 1838, he commanded the Nacogdoches militia, which suppressed the
Córdova Rebellion. In October, when Mexican agents were discovered among the
Kickapoo Indians, Rusk defeated those Indians and their Indian allies. He captured marauding
Caddo Indians in November 1838 and risked an international incident when he invaded United States territory to return them to the Indian agent in
Shreveport, Louisiana. On December 12, 1838, the Texas Congress elected Rusk
chief justice of the republic's
Supreme Court. He served until June 30, 1840, when he resigned to resume his law practice. Later, he headed the bar of the Republic of Texas.
J. Pinckney Henderson, later the first
governor of the state of Texas, and he formed a law partnership in 1841. Early in 1843, Rusk was called upon once again to serve as a military commander. Concern over the lack of protection on the frontier caused Congress, in a joint ballot on January 16, 1843, to elect Rusk major general of the militia of the Republic of Texas, but he resigned in June when Houston obstructed his plans for aggressive warfare against Mexico. Rusk then turned his energies to establishing
Nacogdoches University (operated 1845–1895). He served as vice president of the university when the charter was granted in 1845 and president in 1846. == State of Texas ==