It was located at a stopping place on the eastern route of the El Camino Viejo about 3 miles north of the site of what is now Kettleman City close to the shore of Tulare Lake.
[1] In 1863, California was in the midst of the severe 1863-64 drought that would kill most of the cattle in the southern part of the state.
Tulare Lake and the tules marshes around it were one of the few places cattle could get feed and water.
The adobe was the headquarters for the vaqueros who were tending the herds in the vicinity.
This Kings County, California-related article is a stub.