Drumclog is a small village in South Lanarkshire, Parish of Avendale and Drumclog, Scotland. The habitation is situated on the A71, between Caldermill and Priestland in East Ayrshire at a height of 196.7m and about 5 miles west of Strathaven.
History
Drumclog is best known as the site of the 1679 Battle of Drumclog that took place on Drumclog Moss in which the Covenanters defeated the King's Dragoons who were under the command of Claverhouse. The Lochgoin Covenanters Museum on Whitelee Moor in Fenwick Parish has displays and artifacts from the battle. A monument is located on the site of the battle. Thomas Carlyle visited the battlefield in April 1820 and wrote a description of the "flat wilderness of broken bog, a quagmire not to be trusted". Originally the village was a group of small farms however the opening of the railway in 1905 and the building of a substantial stone church in 1912 created a focus upon the area around Snabe and the habitation then formally achieved the status of a named village. The post office has closed however the church remains in regular use.
Etymology
Drumclog may have Brittonic origins. The first part of the name may be the very common element *drum, indicating a place with "a back, a ridge", and the second element *clog, "a rock, a crag, a steep cliff", in place names meaning a standing stone or other stones of perceived significance. The second part of the name could also be the cognate Gaelic element clach.
Drumclog Memorial Kirk
This church was opened in 1912 and replaced a corrugated-iron church that had been built in 1901 to serve this remote location in Avendale and Drumclog Parish. It was designed by J McLellan Fairley in a Gothic-style with a square tower crowned with an octagonal copper covered spire. The title "Drumclog Memorial Kirk" was given in remembrance of the Battle of Drumclog that was fought nearby in 1679 when the Covenanters defeated Government troops. The original remembrance stone for this battle, damaged by a lightning strike, stands on the west side of the kirk. The stone's inscription reads "In commemoration of the victory obtained on this battlefield, on Sabbath the 11th June 1679, by our Covenanted forefathers over Graham of Claverhouse and his dragoons." A stained glass window of the battle is a further commemoration together with a replica of the Covenanter's Flag.
Drumclog Memorial School
The Old Memorial School was located away from the centre of the village in a location that was most convenient for the farms and their children. The plaque on the wall reads "On the battlefield of Drumclog, this Seminary of Education was erected, in memory of those Christian Heroes, who on Sabath the 1st of June 1679 nobly fought, in defence of Civil and Religious Liberty". The nearest primary school is now at Gilmourton.
Joan Blaeu'a map based on that of Timothy Pont circa 1560 to 1614 shows an 'O. Drumclogs' and a 'N. Drumklog'. Adair's 1685 map shows Drumclog close to a track from Loudoun Hill to Renfrew. Hill of Drumclogg amd Laigh Crumclogg are shown together some un-named buildings and with Snaid recorded on the predecessor to the A71, the Ayr to Edinburgh by Haamilton and Kirk of Shotts Road. Ross's 1773 map shows Drumclog to the north of the Ayr to Edinburgh road with the inaccurate note 'Clevers fought a battle 1684'. In 1816 Forrest's map shows East, High and Laigh Drumclog together with Snabe. Both coal and limeworks are shown. In 1822 lime and coal works are still shown. The 1858 OS map shows old limestone quarries and a number of old limekilns. The 1911 OS map shows the presence of a post office, the church and Drumclog railway station. In 1958 the OS map shows the railway to have been closed and lifted.
Archaeology
In 1803 a buried hoard of Roman coins was unearthed at North Torfoot Farm. In 1848 a Drumclog Tile Works was recorded.