Kusa is a populated place located in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma,[1] about 4 miles east-northeast of Henryetta.[2] Officially incorporated March 27th, 1916,[3] and located in the Henryetta Coal Mining District,[4] Kusa became a coal mining and lead smelting boomtown, complete with movie theaters, hotels, and banks.[5] It even had its own newspaper, The Kusa Industrial, which published between 1914 and 1920.[6] The population grew to a size of about 3,500, making it the largest town in the county at one point.[3]
While coal mining was the major draw,[3] the town was the site of a 47-acre horizontal retort smelter which processed zinc ore beginning in 1915, but ending in 1928.[7] Brickmaking grew up in the 1920s spurred by the need to make the construction grade bricks, fireclay retorts, and clay condensers that were used in the zinc smelting operation; but, those facilities were cleared by 1949.[8] Along with these shutdowns and the closure of the coal mines,[9] Kusa's anticipated bright future was short-circuited by the railroad bypassing the locale in favor of Henryetta,[3] and later by the highway (Highway 266) bypassing it to the north.[5] The town's incorporation was eventually dissolved,[3] and nothing is now left of the original buildings except foundations, although some people still live in the area.[5]