Look just ahead for a simple white-walled house with a wooden porch and a dome-shaped outdoor oven right next to it-that’s the Peralta Adobe, nestled beneath nearby trees and dwarfed by modern city buildings behind it.
Now, close your eyes for a second and pretend you’re stepping out of your sneakers and straight into the world of 1797. San Jose isn’t skyscrapers, honking cars, or trendy coffee shops-it’s open land, wild grasses, and the sounds of families settling a brand new town. Right here, José Manuel Gonzeles, his wife, and their five children built this little adobe, with walls so thick you could probably take a nap on them. Picture him-a founding father of San Jose, an Apache Indian who walked all the way here with the Spanish Anza Party, determined to make a fresh start. This was actually the second spot he called home, after he realized the first site tended to flood every time it rained (and nobody likes waking up with wet socks).
When José passed away, the adobe became the home of Sergeant Luis María Peralta, a real local legend-a leader, a landowner, and a guy who believed two rooms were always better than one. He gave the home its second life, splitting it into two cozy chambers, adding a porch for shade, a kitchen that probably smelled like tortillas, and a chimney to warm cold valley mornings. Over the years, the adobe went from family haven, to grain warehouse, to almost being chopped up for a neighboring building. Even then, the city saved it just in time, restoring it so you could stand here today.
This humble house is more than mud and wood-it’s San Jose in its earliest days, packed with the echoes of three centuries of stories, laughter, tears, and maybe a burnt loaf or two in that oven outside. If these old walls could talk, oh, the dinner parties you’d hear about!




