Wesleyan First Prayerline Church

Wesleyan First Prayerline Church is a church in , .
Tap on a place
to explore it

Places of Interest Nearby

Highlights include Price Tower and Nellie Johnstone No. 1.

Protected area
The is a nineteen-story, 221-foot-high skyscraper at 510 South Dewey Avenue in , United States. One of the few high-rises designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, the is derived from a 1929 proposal for a group of apartment buildings in New York City. is situated 2 miles northwest of Wesleyan First Prayerline Church.

Heritage site
was the first commercially productive oil well in . Completed on April 15, 1897, the well was drilled in the Bartlesville Sand near , opening an era of oil exploration and development in Oklahoma. is situated 2½ miles northwest of Wesleyan First Prayerline Church.

Places in the Area

Nearby places include Bartlesville and Dewey.

is in north of . It is the home of Phillips Petroleum Company now merged with Conoco and called ConocoPhillips.

is a small town in the Region in . It lies on the outskirts of .

Wesleyan First Prayerline Church

Latitude
36.72545° or 36° 43′ 32″ north
Longitude
-95.95292° or 95° 57′ 11″ west
Elevation
679 feet (207 metres)
Open location code
8686P2GW+5R
Open­Street­Map ID
node 357459942
Open­Street­Map feature
amenity=­place_of_worship
Geo­Names ID
4554957
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, and Wikimedia Commons.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.

Satellite Map

Discover Wesleyan First Prayerline Church from above in high-definition satellite imagery.

Localities in the Area

Explore places such as Fonger Addition and Matoaka.

Nearby Places

Explore places such as Oklahoma Wesleyan University Sports Complex and Staff Parking.

Oklahoma: Must-Visit Destinations

Delve into Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, and Lawton.

Curious Places to Discover

Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Photo: Wikimedia, CC0.