Folks:
I do not have any definitive information on who constructed this bog or exactly when, but I can tell you that it is a bog built in the twentieth century and probably in the late 1930s or during the 1940s. In 1885, the area did not provide any hints of a bog:
However, by 1949, the area had changed tremendously:
Note the dam across the stream to form the supply lake and also not the numerous road changes and additions. It appears the bog had several buildings situated near it, as evidenced from the black squares scattered around the area.
I have begun assembling nineteenth-century information about this area and hope to have it posted soon. Meanwhile, unless someone has specific knowledge about this bog operation, only a title search will yield its origin and demise.
For those interested in this area, I suggest picking up a copy of
Runaway, a pamphlet that John C. Borton wrote about a cabin out in the woods near New Lisbon. The booklet even contains a couple photographs of Lower Mill. I purchased my copy at the North Pemberton Railroad Station museum and I presume they still sell it. Borton begins his story in the early twentieth century and, for the most part, ends it in the late 1930s. While he does mention cranberry and blueberry growing in the area, I do not see a reference to a new bog on the Mount Misery Brook (Branch), suggesting it had not yet been built. BTW, Borton does mention an aggressive species of wire grass that really seemed to clog the bogs and kill off the profitabililty of the cranberry operations in the area, for what’s worth.
As time allows, I will post more information.
Best regards,
Jerseyman