During the 19th century Volo Bog was known to neighbors but not to outsiders. While the damp meadows surrounding the bog provided pasturage for a dairy farm, the bog itself was not economically used. The first field study mentioning Volo Bog was published by W.G. Waterman of
Northwestern University in 1921. As the 20th century moved forward, population growth in the
Chicago area placed Volo Bog under threat from residential
development.
Cyrus Mark, the first president of the Illinois chapter of
The Nature Conservancy, spearheaded the efforts to purchase Volo Bog for preservation. Under Mark's leadership, the Conservancy's Illinois chapter purchased the bog and donated it to the
University of Illinois in 1958; this was the first land purchase made by the Illinois Nature Conservancy. The university served as the bog's custodian from 1958 until 1970. Growth in public sensitivity toward
ecological concerns in the 1960s led to fears that the bog could not survive as an isolated unit. It became clear that the wetlands and meadows surrounding the bog formed an essential element in the survival of the bog itself, as well as serving as a teaching tool for plant succession. In 1970 with widespread local public support, the University of Illinois transferred the bog to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, and the state of Illinois began purchasing parcels of land surrounding the bog to create the current park. Volo Bog was listed as a National Natural Landmark in 1973. One of the wetland farm's original, circa-1900 dairy
barns was renovated and reopened as the bog's visitor center in 1980. Work since 1980 has concentrated on rebuilding and maintaining trails throughout the bog, increasing the accessibility of the bog and visitor center for persons with disabilities, and operating continuing ecology-education programs for adults and schoolchildren. A volunteer restoration team was formed in autumn 2023. ==Recreation==