In 2025, Frontier Nursing University celebrates the 100-year anniversary of the inception of the Frontier Nursing Service. We are grateful for the alumni, students, couriers, donors, volunteers, friends, and employees who have made an incredible impact on FNU’s century-long journey. We are celebrating this milestone year by capturing and sharing some of the countless stories that make up our history. Whatever your connection to FNU, we hope you enjoy these stories and are inspired to share your own story with us.
Dr. Janice Macopson, FNP-C, DNP, has devoted her entire adult life to nursing. She retired in June 2024, ending her 49-year career. Since then, she has been quite busy exploring and enjoying the art world. She recently served as a presenter at the August Wilson Society’s Biennial Colloquium, held April 2-5, 2025, at the University of Pittsburgh.
August, who is Dr. Macopson’s cousin, passed away in 2005, was a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and known for his Century Cycle plays that chronicled the lives of African Americans during the twentieth century. Dr. Macopson’s presentation titled “Blood Memories: The Legacy of Ella Cutler and August Wilson” served as a deeply personal exploration of the enduring narratives carried by her great grandmother and the iconic playwright. These intertwined legacies reflected universal themes of resilience and redemption.
Dr. Macopson’s own career reflects resilience and commitment to serve. Though retired, she was contacted recently to fill in part time at her previous employer, University of North Carolina (UNC) Health Blue Ridge. Once again, she answered the call to serve.
“They just lost one of their providers and asked if I could help out a couple days a week for a few weeks until they get a full-time replacement,” said Macopson. “I always felt like I had a calling to do something in healthcare, and I’ve spent the last 49 years of my life working in some form of cardiac services.”
Dr. Macopson grew up in Marion, N.C., near Spear Mountain in rural western North Carolina. Her great grandmother Eller Cutler was a midwife and worked with a local physician on Spear Mountain in the 1900s. The nearby Cutler Falls are named after her family.
“My family was the only African American family living on Spear Mountain in the 1900s,” Macopson said. “They were not slaves. They were landowners. Eller had a rough time in that town after her husband Jacob died. But she stayed. She was accused of things that were not true, and she was arrested because her white neighbors did not want her there. But she was resilient and savvy living on her land until her death in 1935.”
Though Janice did not follow in her great grandmother’s midwifery footsteps, she credits her ancestry as the root of her desire to pursue a career in healthcare.
“I feel like there was a calling for me to go into healthcare,” Macopson said. “My cousin called it ‘blood memories’ or the ‘pulse of your ancestors.’ I think it is your DNA, plus the pulse and spirit of your ancestors. It’s amazing how certain things live on from generation to generation.”
Macopson followed her instincts and became a nurse. She became a nurse practitioner in 2001 and later began working with Blue Ridge Cardiology in Morganton, N.C., in 2011.
She worked in various positions in Carolinas Healthcare System and in rural areas such as Burke, McDowell and Buncombe counties. She was the Director of Nursing over critical care services at Grace Hospital in Morganton for nearly 25 years before becoming a nurse practitioner in 2001, caring primarily for cardiac patients.
“The more rural hospitals are where my heart was,” she said. “I felt that group of patients and families needed me most.” Her heart was also committed to being a lifelong learner, which is what led her to obtain her Doctor of Nursing Practice from Frontier in 2019.
“I’ve always been in school until now,” Macopson laughed. “I was probably one of the oldest students at Frontier, but I hung in and made it through, with great support from Dr. Khara’ Jefferson (Program Director for the Doctor of Nursing Practice Program).”
Macopson said earning the DNP was important to her role as a healthcare provider in a rural and underserved area of the state.
“As we see the shortages in healthcare, nurses are the best group to bridge that gap. We know that nurses are the most trusted group of people in healthcare. So, I thought, I already have a master’s and if you can use that wealth of knowledge, you can be helpful to your community. The DNP gives nurses more credibility because you’ve reached the top of your educational journey.”
We want to celebrate our anniversary by capturing and sharing the countless stories that make up our history. Whatever your connection to FNU, we are incredibly grateful to you and want to hear your Frontier story.
>> Share Your Story
>> Read More from “A Century of Stories”