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==History== Prior to Texas' annexation in 1845, the land while from time to time occupied by Caddoan peoples, was generally unpopulated until 1819, when [[Cherokee]] Indians, led by [[The Bowl (Cherokee chief)|The Bowl]] settled in what is now Rusk County.<ref>{{cite book|last=Clarke|first=Mary Whatley|title=Chief Bowles and the Texas Cherokees: a history|year=1971|pages=17}}</ref> The Treaty of Bowles Village on February 23, 1836, between the [[Republic of Texas]] and the Cherokee and 12 affiliated tribes, gave parts of western Rusk County along with parts of today's Gregg and Van Zandt Counties, in addition to the whole areas of Cherokee and Smith Counties to the tribes.<ref>{{cite book|last=Winfrey|first=Day|title=Indian Papers of Texas, Volume I: Treaty between Texas and the Cherokee Indians|year=1825β1916|pages=14β17}}</ref> They remained on these lands until the Cherokee War in the summer of 1839. Thus the [[Cherokee]] were driven out of Rusk County only to return in 1844 and 1845 with the purchase of 10,000 acres of land by Benjamin Franklin Thompson a white man married to a [[Cherokee]]. This established the [[Mount Tabor Indian Community]],<ref>{{cite book|last=Pynes|first=Patrick|title=Historic Origins of the Mount Tabor Indian Community: Northern Arizona University|year=2007|pages=74}}</ref> some six miles south of present-day Kilgore that later spread to incorporate areas near Troup, Arp and [[Overton, Texas]]. Originally organized as a part of [[Nacogdoches County]], Rusk was established as its own county by the Congress of the Republic of Texas on January 16, 1843. By 1850, it was the second-most populous county in Texas of the 78 counties that had been organized at that time, according to the [[1850 United States census|1850 census]]. Rusk County's population was 8,148 then; it was surpassed only by Harrison County with 11,822 people. With the discovery of oil in Joinerville, within the county, in October 1930, an oil boom began that caused county population to nearly double during the next decade, and caused dramatic changes in the county towns. Rusk is one of the five counties that are part of the [[East Texas Oil Field]], whose production has been a major part of the economy since that time.<ref name=oo>{{cite book |last1=Olien |first1=Diana |last2=Olien |first2=Roger |title=Oil in Texas, The Gusher Age, 1895-1945 |date=2002 |publisher=University of Texas Press |location=Austin |isbn=0292760566 |pages=170β171}}</ref> Rusk County was one of 25 entirely dry counties in Texas until January 2012. The city of Henderson at that time opted to allow selling and serving beer and wine.<ref>{{Cite web | title = TABC map of wet/dry counties as of June 2012 | url = http://www.tabc.state.tx.us/images/wetdry.gif | publisher = Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission | access-date = July 11, 2012}}</ref> America's worst school disaster happened in Rusk County in 1937, when nearly 300 people, most of them children, were killed in a [[New London School explosion|natural gas explosion]] at the London Independent School District (which has since consolidated into West Rusk County Consolidated Independent School District).
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