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.

Ruth Beeman, MPH
Ruth Beeman was born on January 10, 1925, in Harriston, Virginia. After graduating from high school, she entered the Army Nursing Corps in 1943, beginning a lifelong career in nursing.
After her stint in the Army, she received a Diploma in Nursing from Baltimore General Hospital (1946), a Nurse Midwife Certificate from the Maternity Center Association School of Nurse-Midwifery in New York (1950), a B.S. in Public Health Nursing from the University of Pennsylvania (1950), a Diploma in Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium (1953) and a MPH from Columbia University (1957).
Ruth’s career as a nurse-midwife and educator spanned six decades and multiple countries. She worked as a nurse-midwife in the Bronx, New York, providing low-income families with maternal care as well as basic health care. From 1953-56 she served as a medical missionary for the United Christian Medical Society in the Belgian Congo, West Africa. As a consultant, she assisted nursing programs and health agencies in the Caribbean, Africa, Central America and Europe.
In addition to providing care, Ruth was passionate about educating others to do the same work she was doing. She taught nurse-midwifery at several universities and then was recruited to the Frontier School of Midwifery and Family Nursing (FSMFN) in 1983. She was tasked with assisting Frontier in maintaining its national accreditation, recruiting faculty, maintaining funding, and establishing an affiliation with an institution of higher learning.
Assisted by her midwifery and nursing contacts, Ruth succeeded in strengthening the curriculum to meet the challenges of the growth of the profession in the United States. She later worked with Kitty Ernst, Kate Ireland, Ruth Lubic, and Joyce Fitzpatrick, along with consultation from other leading nursing and midwifery educators, to translate that curriculum for the development of the plan for a comprehensive distance learning program for nurse-midwives; the Community-Based Nurse-Midwifery Education Program.
Ruth served as Dean of the FSMFN from 1983-1989. After her stint as Dean, she became the first person to be named to the Chair of Midwifery position at Frontier. In later years, Ruth continued to contribute through her parish nursing work and mentoring Frontier doctoral students. In recognition of her many contributions, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters by Frontier Nursing University in 2011. Upon her death in 2012, she left a bequest to FNU in support of its ongoing growth and success.
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.
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