Jeralean L. Kurtz was born on 23 May 1899 in Montrose, Georgia, to Samuel and Amelia Kurtz. She had 11 siblings. She spent her early life living on a farm, picking cotton and peanuts, and digging sweet potatoes out of the ground. In 1935, she moved to Inkster, Michigan, where she has resided ever since. In 1936, she married Alfred Talley (1893–1988). Together, they had one child, a daughter named Thelma Holloway, who was born in 1937. Jeralean and Alfred remained married for 52 years until he died on 17 October 1988, at the age of 95.
Talley never drove a car in her life. She stated that this was because she attempted to do so once, but ended up pushing the wrong pedal, causing the car to go in reverse instead of moving forward. She refused to try driving again since then.
Her daughter Thelma stated that Jeralean had remained active in her later life by making quilts, sewing dresses, and playing the slot machines at casinos. She bowled until she was 104 years old, when her legs got too weak, but she still went on annual fishing trips with her friend Michael Kinloch and his son, Tyler (who also was her godson). In May 2013, when she was 114 years old, she caught 7 catfish. At the time of her death, Talley had three grandchildren, ten great-grandchildren, and four great-great-grandchildren.
Talley was a devout Christian, and was a member of the New Jerusalem Missionary Baptist Church, the members of whom affectionately refer to her as “Mother Talley”. In May 2013, they celebrated her 114th birthday with a service and a meal, as well as officially naming the church’s driveway after her. Talley also received a personalized letter from President Barack Obama, who congratulated her for being “part of an extraordinary generation”.
Talley lived by the motto: “Treat others the way you want to be treated”. Known in the community for her wisdom and wit, she was occasionally asked for advice. She advised people to use common sense, saying, “I don’t have much education, but what little sense I got, I try to use it”.
On 17 June 2015, Talley died at her home after a week of hospitalization at the age of 116 years, 25 days. She had prayed not to suffer before death, and reportedly died peacefully. Regarding her great age, she had been quoted as saying “There’s nothing I can do about it.”
Talley is currently the oldest validated person ever born in the U.S. state of Georgia, the oldest validated person ever who died in the U.S. state of Michigan, and the sixth-oldest validated person ever from the United States, behind Sarah Knauss, Susannah Mushatt Jones, Gertrude Weaver, Elizabeth Bolden, and Besse Cooper.