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Almanac note · History and culture

Crocker Art Museum grew from a family gallery into a public first

SacramentoCrocker Art Museumartmuseum

Crocker Art Museum started as a family gallery. Then it became a place the whole city could share. Edwin and Margaret Crocker built the art collection in the 1800s. Some art came from a trip through Europe. They also bought art made in California. Sacramento was young, and the state was still shaping its public life.

The gallery sat next to the Crocker family home. Local people could visit it. In 1885, Margaret Crocker gave the gallery building and the art to the City of Sacramento. The museum calls that gift the start of the first public art museum west of the Mississippi River.

The Crocker has a useful place in Sacramento’s story. The Capitol, railroads, and river trade were big pieces, but the city also had people trying to build shared public places in a growing Western city.

Today, the museum includes the older house and gallery, plus a newer pavilion. Look up exhibits and hours, especially if you want a certain collection area or plan to bring kids.

Where to see it

Crocker Art Museum in downtown Sacramento.

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Reviewed July 1, 2026

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