It became Wilberforce College in 1988.
As an act of political patronage, the state legislature established a commercial, normal and industrial (CNI) department at Wilberforce College.
Two of his children were students at Wilberforce College and required money for tuition fees.
Aiming for a teaching career, Price enrolled in the music education program at the all-black Wilberforce College in Wilberforce, Ohio.
Elizabeth Keckley donated her Lincoln memorabilia to Wilberforce College for its sale in fundraising to rebuild after a fire in 1865.
In 1863 Smith was appointed as professor of anthropology at Wilberforce College, Ohio.
There are no further education establishments on the estate, the nearest being Wilberforce College.
Central State University's history began when Wilberforce College was privately established in Tawawa Springs, Ohio, in 1856.
For instance, in 1860, most of the 200 subscription students at Wilberforce College were the mixed-race sons of white planters, who paid for their education.
He was a science graduate of Wilberforce College in Ohio and received his medical degree at the University of Chicago in 1929.