The following result answers your question. We can divide a circle into $N$ parts by straightedge and compass if and only if
$$N=2^kp_1p_2\dots p_t,$$
where the $p_i$ are distinct Fermat primes. (We can have $k=0$, or $t=0$.)
A Fermat prime is a prime of the form $2^{2^j}+1$. There are only $5$ known Fermat primes: $3$, $5$, $17$, $257$, and $65537$.
Since $7$ is not a Fermat prime, we cannot by straightedge and compass do the division you seek.
Remark: The result was first published by Wantzel. Some people give Gauss credit for the result. Gauss certainly was the first to prove that the circle can be divided into $17$ equal parts by straightedge and compass. He almost certainly knew that any $360^\circ/N$ angle, where $N$ is of the shape described above, is constructible. There is no evidence that he knew that nothing else is.
Put $N=9$. Then $N$ is not of the shape described above, since $3$ occurs twice in the factorization. This shows that the $20^\circ$ angle is not constructible. Since $60^\circ$ is certainly constructible, that shows we cannot trisect the general angle by straightedge and compass.
Many books have proofs of the Wantzel result, for example Allan Clark's Elements of Abstract Algebra.
n/ngiven by a certain formula?) – Bakuriu Jul 11 '13 at 06:41