The Treaty of Cusseta, also known as the Third Treaty of Washington, was one of several with the "
Five Civilized Tribes." Between 1814 and 1830, the Creek had gradually ceded lands under pressure from European-American settlers and the US government through treaties such as the
Treaty of Fort Jackson and the
Treaty of Washington (1826). Creek territory was constrained to a strip in east central
Alabama along the
Georgia border. President
Andrew Jackson had signed the
Indian Removal Act in 1830, which ultimately led to the
deportation of native peoples in the
Southeastern United States to the
Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River. Although treaty stipulations had prohibited white settlement of Creek lands, squatters moving into the territory were common and caused significant friction with the Creek. The settlers encroached on their land and competed for game, destroying hunting territory by clearing land and developing farms. Tensions eventually resulted in a party of Creek warriors attacking and burning the town of
Roanoke, Georgia. In response, federal officials met with Creek leaders in the Creek village of
Cusseta (
Kasihta) on the
Chattahoochee River in Georgia. (
Lawson Army Airfield in
Fort Moore is sited on the former location of Cusseta.) The Creeks were compelled to agree to federal terms as outlined in the Treaty of Cusseta. The treaty was later signed in
Washington, D.C. == Terms ==