Freeman Junction, a ghost town in Kern County, California, USA, was first homesteaded in the early 1870s.
Freeman S. Raymond built a stage coach station here to accommodate travelers between the desert mines and Los Angeles.
A group of Native Americans who were defending their homes and families in 1909 killed off the homesteaders and burned the stage station, after which the property lay dormant for several years.
In the winter of 1849–50, forty-niner parties, en route to the California gold fields, passed through here after escaping Death Valley.
On February 25, 1874, Tiburcio Vasquez and his band of outlaws robbed several freight wagon crews at Raymond's station (then called Coyote Holes).