Bagley Junction is located on Bagley Road on the left bank of the Peshtigo River, at the north end of the Potato Rapids Reservoir, at an elevation of. It is connected by road to Walsh to the north, Porterfield to the west, Peshtigo to the south, and Marinette to the east.
Name
Bagley Junction is named for John Bagley, a lumberman. After his early activity in Wisconsin, Bagley was active in Washington and later became president of the Tacoma Eastern Railroad. There is another Bagley Junction, also named after John Bagley, in King County, Washington.
History
Bagley Junction was inhabited by Native Americans before the arrival of white settlers. Four oval burial mounds known as the Bagley Junction Mounds were mapped by Harvey O. Younger in 1913, when he also discovered a stone hoe at the site. Shell content indicates that the mounds were formed from soil taken from the bank of the Peshtigo River. The mounds may be associated with a Late Woodland habitation. The burial mounds were further investigated in 2007 during an archaeological survey for a road project. The survey identified two mounds about apart between Bagley Road and the Peshtigo River; the southern mound measures and is about high, and the northern mound measures and is about high. There is no surface evidence of the other two mounds mapped in 1913; it is believed they were destroyed by a former driveway that is now used as a snowmobile trail. In 1894, the Wisconsin & Michigan Railway opened an office and established workshops at Bagley Junction, employing up to sixty men. That year the company also erected coal sheds and water tanks at the site. From 1894 to 1938, the site was a railroad junction for a line that ran north to Walsh and onward to Iron Mountain, Michigan. The line was built using surplus rail from the Chicago World's Fair, which had closed in 1893. The line to Walsh was removed in 1938, but an east-west branch line belonging to the former Milwaukee Road still exists. The track is currently owned by Escanaba and Lake Superior Railroad. In the early 20th century a lumber camp and sawmill operated in Bagley Junction. In the 1920s, Andrew Jackson Smith, a resident of the community and a Civil War veteran, was jocularly known as the "mayor" of Bagley Junction. Bagley Junction had three houses in 2010, when it was also the site of the USCA National Canoe and Kayak Championships.