He became president of the O'Neil Lumber Company in 1908 and soon retired a very wealthy man at age 48, and moved with his family to Paris.
[3] O'Neil published only one volume of poems, 1918's A Cabinet of Jade, the title suggested by Zoë Akins.
He co-edited the 1923 book, Today's Poetry: An Anthology, with Nelson Crawford.
She was a socialite and suffragist, the daughter of George and Carrie (Horton) Blackman.
This biographical article about an American poet born in the 1870s is a stub.