Morton College Explained

Morton College
Type:Public, community college
City:Cicero
State:Illinois
Country:United States
Enrollment:3,850 (all undergraduate)(Spring 2022)[1]

Morton College is a public community college in Cicero, Illinois. It is the second oldest community college in the state only after Joliet Junior College.[2] While the campus itself was constructed in 1975, the college was established in 1924. Before the construction of the campus, the college was housed in the same building as the local high school and was Morton Junior College..[3] It is named after Julius Sterling Morton, a Nebraska newspaper editor and politician who served as President Grover Cleveland's Secretary of Agriculture.

Land was acquired for an athletics field in 1994. Intercollegiate athletics for men include baseball, basketball, soccer, and cross country. Women's sports include volleyball, basketball, cross country, soccer and softball.

The college is a National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium training center. It also operates a low-power FM station, WZQC-LP, at 99.1 MHz.[4]

External links

41.824°N -87.7626°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: College Navigator - Morton College .
  2. Book: Deuchler, Douglas . Cicero Revisited . Arcadia Publishing . 2006 . 978-0-7385-4107-5 . 122.
  3. News: Morton College 50th year dinner-dance scheduled . Chicago Tribune . 31 October 1974 . N B2.
  4. https://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/fmq?call=WZQC-LP FM Query Results: WZQC-LP