Fort Cusseta /fɔrt kəˈsiːdə/ was a wooden stockade built by white settlers to protect against feared Creek Indian attacks.
Its ruins still exist today within the small community of Cusseta, Alabama.
Following the signing of the Treaty of Cusseta, local settlers built a 16 feet by 30 feet hand-hewn log fort for protection from a possible uprising from the Creek village of Cusseta.
Following the removal of the Indians, the fort was incorporated into a building that had various uses over the years, including that of a country store.
Today the structure is vacant with its surviving heart-pine walls exposed and beginning to deteriorate.