CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

King City grew where wheat, rail, and the Salinas River met

King City's story starts with Charles King, dry Salinas Valley land, wheat farming, the railroad, and a town that helped anchor southern Monterey County.

King CitySalinas ValleyMonterey County

King City makes more sense when you picture the southern Salinas Valley before the modern highway. The land was dry, windy, and hard to farm without the right timing and water. Older maps even described the area as part of a great Salinas desert.

Charles King, an Oakland businessman, acquired a large piece of this valley land in 1884. Wheat became the early crop, and the railroad helped make the town possible. A rail stop meant grain could move, supplies could arrive, and a settlement could grow into a service center for nearby farms and ranches.

The Salinas River is part of the story too. In wet years it could run bank to bank and change the valley quickly. In dry times the land could feel wide and exposed. King City grew in that push and pull between river, field, rail, and road.

For a first visit, look beyond the Highway 101 stop. King City is one of the places that explains southern Monterey County: farm work, valley weather, old rail logic, and a town that became a practical anchor in a long valley.

Where to see it

Downtown King City and the Salinas Valley corridor along Highway 101.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 2, 2026

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