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  1. Website. www .wheaton .edu. Wheaton College is a private Evangelical Christian liberal arts college in Wheaton, Illinois. [3] It was founded by evangelical abolitionists in 1860. [4] Wheaton College was a stop on the Underground Railroad and graduated one of Illinois' first black college graduates.

  2. Wheaton, Illinois. Wheatons järnvägsstation. /  41.85611°N 88.10722°V  / 41.85611; -88.10722. Wheaton är en stad ( city) i DuPage County, i delstaten Illinois, USA. Enligt United States Census Bureau har staden en folkmängd på 53 238 invånare (2011) och en landarea på 29,1 km². Wheaton är huvudort i DuPage County.

  3. Wheaton (Illinois) /  41.856111°N 88.108333°W 41.856111; -88.108333  ( Wheaton) /  41.856111°N 88.108333°W 41.856111; -88.108333  ( Wheaton) Wheaton è un comune degli Stati Uniti d'America, situato nell' Illinois, nella contea di DuPage, di cui è anche il capoluogo.

  4. 1 Wheaton College, 501 College Ave ( just east of downtown Wheaton ), ☏ +1 630-752-5000. Sometimes referred to as "The Harvard of Evangelical schools", Wheaton College is known for being an interdenominational destination school for devout Christian students seeking an elite liberal arts education. ( updated Nov 2021 | edit) 41.8667 -88.0994.

  5. The Church of the Resurrection (known colloquially as "Rez") is an Anglican church in Wheaton, Illinois. It is the cathedral parish of the Anglican Diocese of the Upper Midwest, whose first and current bishop was Rez's longtime pastor. Since its founding in 1954, the church has had a significant and complex role in the Anglican realignment in ...

  6. Wheaton Park District. WLWX (FM) Categories: Cities in Illinois. Chicago metropolitan area. Cities in DuPage County, Illinois. Hidden categories: Commons category link is on Wikidata. Wikipedia categories named after populated places in Illinois.

  7. Founders. A glimpse into Wheaton’s history begins with its founders: Erastus Gary, Jesse Wheaton, and Warren Wheaton. The trio traveled west from New England and claimed hundreds of acres of land in northeastern Illinois in 1837 and 1838. There, they began to lay important cornerstones for what would become the City of Wheaton.