In 1879 the club changed its name to
Milton of Campsie, retaining Allan Baird as club secretary and keeping its facilities at Mrs Whitehead's Inn. It reached the second round of the Cup under that name in
1879–80, but lost a 4–0 win at home to
Campsie Glen. Milton of Campsie lodged a protest on the basis that the referee had given a decision before anyone had appealed for it, in breach of the then Law XIII. Not only did the Association dismiss the protest, it reprimanded Milton of Campsie for "the language used in the protest against the referee". The club's last Scottish Cup entry in
1881–82 was its best; for the first time, the club won two ties in the same competition, and thanks to a bye, it made the fourth round (last 27). The club had to win its second round tie against Lenzie twice, the original win being overturned on the basis that the pitch was covered in stones and not a fit state for football. Lenzie had the choice of venue for the replay, but as its own ground was occupied, got permission from Thomas Allan, owner of Kincaid House in Milton of Campsie, to host the match on a field near the house, which had formerly been a bowling green. Lenzie's "very refined game" was no match for the more brutal Milton style, and Milton of Campsie won 2–0. In the third round the club lost 3–1 at
Falkirk. Before the 1882–83 season, the club was removed from the Scottish Football Association roll for non-payment of subscriptions. The name was revived twice more; in 1885, for a club playing at French Mill, and in 1890, for a
senior club playing at Cannerton Park, but these seem to have had no link (other than geographical) to the original club. ==Colours==