CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

McFarland grew as a farm town, then Highway 99 split the map

McFarland's story starts with a 1909 townsite, growth during the Depression, incorporation in 1957, and Highway 99 dividing the city into east and west sides.

McFarlandHighway 99Kern County

McFarland’s story is a valley story with a road running right through it. The town was founded in 1909 and later incorporated in 1957. It grew during the Great Depression years, when many Central Valley towns were changing with farming, labor, roads, and new families looking for work.

Then Highway 99 became one of the city’s biggest facts on the ground. Built through the area in 1950, the highway divided McFarland into an east side and a west side. That kind of split matters in a small city. It can shape how people reach schools, shops, parks, churches, and neighbors.

McFarland is also known beyond Kern County because of its high-school running story, but the town’s deeper local pattern is practical: farm country, a compact city, a major valley highway, and people building community on both sides of it.

For a first look, notice how close everything sits to Highway 99. The road is part of how the city has had to organize itself for decades, beyond serving as a way to pass by McFarland.

Where to see it

McFarland along Highway 99 north of Bakersfield.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 2, 2026

California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.

Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.

Connected places

Where it fits on the map

Open a place page for the county layer, nearby places, and other California entries tied to that local page.

Related notes

Keep following this thread.

These are picked from nearby places, shared tags, and the same California topic shelf.

Directory paths

Go forward, sideways, or back.

Use the connected place, topic shelf, Almanac notes, or search path to keep your place in the directory.