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". 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" (
Welsh drum-clog), 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==