Name The
toponym Kesh comes from
ceis, the
Irish word for 'wicker bridge', which refers to the crossing in the middle of the village. The village is not built around a parish church or chapel. Two
Church of Ireland parishes of Magherculmoney and Tubrid meet at the river and their respective parish churches are each about either side of the village. Kesh began as a ford or crossing place on the Glendarragh River. In the past, Lough Erne came very much closer to the village than it does today. Before the first great Erne Drainage in the 1880s, the lake was about eight feet higher and, especially in time of flood, may almost have reached Kesh. The
ráth on Rosscah Hill above the late Joe Robert's house (a former rectory of Drumkeeran Parish) indicates original settlement here probably as far back as the Iron Age, c. 2000 years ago. There are two ráths on this hill, but the nearer to the house is believed to be a decorative feature made at the time of the construction of the house in the late 1700s. The large standing stone in Rosculban may be a relic of the Iron Age as well. After a time, the ford was augmented with a wicker bridge, for which the Gaelic word is
ceis, and hence the village got its name. The name had been spelt in varying ways but generally as Kish or Cash until relatively modern times.
Crevenish Castle The remains of Crevenish Castle are south-east of the village on the Crevenish Road, or 'the back road' as the locals call it. During its time it was home to the Blennerhasset and Maguire families in the seventeenth-century and eighteenth-century.
The Troubles On 2 December 1984, 28-year old
Alistair Slater, a member of 22
SAS of the
British Army, and 27-year-old
Antoine Mac Giolla Bhrighde, a
Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)
volunteer, were both shot dead during an IRA ambush and a gun battle between an undercover 22 SAS British Army units and an IRA
active service unit near Kesh. 26-year old
Kieran Fleming, an IRA volunteer, drowned in the Bannagh River, near Kesh, as he tried to escape from the gun battle, in what became known as the
Kesh ambush. The IRA men had been attempting to bomb a
Royal Ulster Constabulary police car in Kesh. Slater was posthumously awarded the
Military Medal for his bravery in the action. ==Tourism==