Ethel Willard Sperry was born in
Stockton, California, in 1861. Her parents were Simon Willard Sperry and Caroline Elizabeth (
née Barker) Sperry, from
Stockton, California, and sister to Elizabeth Helen Sperry (wife of Prince
André Poniatowski). On October 6, 1886, she married
William Henry Crocker, a member of the wealthy
Crocker family and a prominent member of the
Republican Party. Over the course of his business career, he became the president of
Crocker National Bank. Ethel and other family members owned the
Sperry Flour Company, which was heavily invested in the
World War I humanitarian effort by sending its flour across the ocean to aid
famine-stricken citizens of Belgium. Encouraged by
Lou Henry Hoover, wife of the later
President Herbert Hoover, Crocker became treasurer of the Woman's "Belgian Relief Fund" in
San Francisco and State Chair for the Woman's Section of the
Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB). On another level, Crocker was the leading patron of French
Impressionist art in California at that time. In the 1890s, Crocker and
California Impressionist Lucy Bacon lent
William Kingston Vickery, owner of the San Francisco art gallery
Vickery, Atkins & Torrey, several French Impressionist paintings. Vickery then supervised a series of these loan exhibitions in San Francisco and introduced
Impressionism to California in the form of paintings by
Claude Monet,
Eugène Boudin,
Paul Cézanne,
Camille Pissarro,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and
Edgar Degas. Crocker also sponsored the studies of the
Zoellner Quartet with
César Thomson in Belgium. ==Personal life==