Background
She was born Julia Elizabeth Oliver in Johnsburg, New New York
She was born Julia Elizabeth Oliver in Johnsburg, New New York
She studied drama at the Stanhope-Wheatcroft Dramatic School, and worked in magazine journalism. She attended Radcliffe College and Boston University simultaneously as a special student.
Professor Charles Townsend Copeland of Harvard was her personal instructor for three years and was a strong influence. She became a leading fashion model. In 1903 she was chosen as the "Harrison Fisher Girl".
The couple then moved to Boston.
She continued to work as a journalist there and in New York, becoming literary editor of the American Review of Reviews. In 1913, the year of the Exhibition of Modern Art in New York, she wrote an article featuring Cezanne, Picaso, Derain, Seurat, and other modernists.
This was at a time when defense of modern art brought forth hostile criticism. Through the publicity she received from the article, she became acquainted with John Quinn.
In 1916 she began to publish narrative verse about the Adirondacks.
Her books, "Wild Apples" and "Neighbors of Yesterday", were published in 1916 followed by "Rock Flower". From this period she traveled in Europe, met important figures of modernism, and co-operated with the collector John Quinn in building up his contemporary art collection. In 1922, she accepted the American editorship of the Transatlantic Review published simultaneously in New York and Paris and edited by Ford Madox Ford.
After Quinn"s death in 1924 Jeanne helped prepare the collection of his letters that became the John Quinn Memorial Collection at the New York Public Library.
The collection includes an extensive correspondence with Joseph Conrad. In 1932 she moved to Schenectady, where she worked as a social worker
Jeanne"s friends included many of the period"s leading authors and artists. She was particularly close to Ford Madox Ford, Ezra Pound, and William Butler Yeats.
Her own papers can be found in the Jeanne R. Foster-William M. Murphy Collection at the New York Public Library and at Harvard University"s Houghton Library, which holds her correspondence with poet and author Ezra Pound.