Warren L. Wheaton

Warren L. Wheaton (1812-1903) was an American farmer, teacher, legislator, businessman, philanthropist, and benefactor and namesake of Wheaton College and Wheaton, Illinois.

Early life

Warren Lyon Wheaton was born in Pomfret, Connecticut on March 6, 1812 to James and Nancy Lyon Wheaton, both natives of New England. Wheaton's family was descended from Reformed Baptist Puritans from the United Kingdom, who helped found the First Baptist Church in Massachusetts and who were sympathetic to Roger Williams. Wheaton's grandfather, James Wheaton, lived in Providence, Rhode Island and fought in the Revolutionary War. Warren Wheaton was the eldest of thirteen children. He attended the Woodstock Academy in Woodstock, Connecticut and became a school teacher after attending the academy for a-year-and-a-half. He also served in the local militia.[1][2][3]

Move to West

After hearing about the fertile farmland in Illinois from Erastus Gary, Wheaton visited there in 1837 and returned permanently in 1838, followed by his brother, Jesse Childs Wheaton. While staying with Erastus Gary in Illinois, Wheaton experienced a conversion to Christianity, as did his brother, Jesse, and they both eventually became members of the Methodist church. Warren Wheaton then started farming in Du Page County, Illinois after receiving some government land there, laying claim to 640 acres (2.6 km2) of land in the center of town. Jesse Childs Wheaton later made claim to 300 acres (1.2 km2) of land just west of Warren's.[4] Other settlers from New England soon joined the Wheaton settlement. In 1850, ten blocks of land were platted and anyone who was willing to build immediately was granted free land. In 1853, the lots were surveyed and a formal plat for the city was filed with the county. The city was then incorporated in 1859 with Warren serving as its first President. In 1848 Warren Wheaton married Harriet E. Rickard (1826-1863) of Pomfret, Connecticut and had six children before she died after giving birth to their last child in 1863. Warren Lyon Wheaton married a second time, to Christiana Shugg on 4 April 1877 in Manhattan, New York City. Christiana Shugg was born on 31 December 1816 and baptised on 19 January 1817, in Helston, Cornwall, England. Her parents were William Shugg (1791-1856), a miller, and Elizabeth Williams (c.1789-1862).[5] The Shugg family emigrated from Cornwall to North America on the ship, 'Margaret Evans' docking on 21 November 1846, at New York City Port. Prior to her marriage, Christiana Shugg was a milliner and business-woman, advertising her shop on Fifth Avenue in the New York Times. After twenty years of marriage, Christiana Wheaton died in 1899. Buried in Wheaton Cemetery, DuPage, Illinois, her gravestone memorial reads: Christiana Shugg Wheaton 1818-1899. Warren L. Wheaton was later buried beside her. Christiana's obituary (pub. Friday 8 Sept 1899) noted 'Her parents were members of the Baptist church and reared their children in the habits of prayer and the study of God's word,' and 'when twenty-three or twenty-four years of age she came to New York where for many years she made her home.' ... 'she became a great blessing and shared in the cares and labor of her husband for home, church and college.'[6] Brother Jesse Childs Wheaton (1813-1895), a carpenter, married Orinda Gary (1813-1882), and they operated an Underground Railroad depot on the their 300 acre farm, which adjoined Warren's claim. They teamed with Warren Wheaton and his wife Harriet to undertake secret network duties. To conceal runaways, the Wheatons equipped their house with a secret attic-within-an-attic. In addition to laying out the city of Wheaton, they supported an abolitionist Wesleyan church. Jesse Childs Wheaton co-founded Wheaton College, a Quaker institution that also harboured fugitive slaves within the college community.[7] Warren Lyon Wheaton was elected to the legislature by 1848 as a Democrat and persuaded the railroad to locate through his settlement and encouraged other settlers to locate there.[2][3]

Philanthropy

He donated land and funds to various churches and civic organizations, including land for a Methodist church, land for a new courthouse, a railroad right-of-way, and large donations of land and cash to Wheaton College, which was named in his honor. He also made large donations to the Aurora Institute, Clark Seminary, and Evanston College. Wheaton also helped form the Mutual Security Company of Wheaton and contributed to the Milwaukee, Galena and Chicago Telegraph Company. A large birthday celebration was held for Wheaton on his ninetieth birthday with students and faculty from Wheaton College presenting gifts. Warren Wheaton died the following year on February 1, 1903 at the age of ninety.[2][3]

References

  1. Green's Connecticut Annual Register and United States Calendar (Samuel Green, 1832) pg. 93
  2. 1 2 3 Newton Bateman, Paul Selby, Historical encyclopedia of Illinois, Volume 2, (Munsell Pub. Co., 1913) pg. 1074-1075
  3. 1 2 3 Portrait and Biographical Record of Cook and Dupage Counties, Illinois ...(Lake City Publishing Company, 1894), pg. 120
  4. "History of Wheaton, Illinois". City of Wheaton. 2010. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  5. Helston Parish Records
  6. Obituary pub. Wheaton Illinoian, Friday, 8 September 1899
  7. The Underground Railroad: An Encyclopaedia of People, Places and Operations. Pub. Routledge, 2015. Early source quoted in entry 'Historical Encyclopaedia of Illinois. Pub. Munsell, Chicago, 1912.'
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