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Catherine Elizabeth Keleher, known to most as Kate, died peacefully at home in Acton, Massachusetts on June 26, 2026, at the age of 80. Born in New York City and raised in Melrose, Massachusetts (with deep family roots in Winthrop), she lived for more than 30 years in Concord, where she built a rich and enduring life in both community and spirit.
Kate graduated from Melrose High School and went on to attend Massachusetts College of Art. An artist through and through—by calling, soul, and profession—Kate began her career in fashion but ultimately found her vocation in graphic design, even creating countless logos and visual designs for church programs and community life. Her creativity and eye for beauty showed in everything she did.
Raising her children was among the most meaningful work of Kate’s life. She devoted many years to being a stay-at-home mom, creating a home where creativity, curiosity, independent thinking, and confidence could flourish. She welcomed those who became part of her family with the same steady support, warmth, and quiet generosity that characterized her parenting, making them feel seen, accepted, and truly at home.
She was known for her wit—quick, sarcastic, and incisive—and for a mind that delighted in language, puzzles, and trivia. A voracious reader with an expansive vocabulary, Kate loved crossword puzzles and, in her earlier years, played bridge with enthusiasm and skill. In the 1960s, she was part of the Cambridge folk music scene, an era she carried with her in spirit: communal, creative, and a little rebellious.
Deeply engaged in the world around her, Kate was passionate about women’s rights and political issues, and she lived her values with clarity and conviction. A longtime Unitarian Universalist, she found spiritual meaning in nature and in a sense of the feminine divine. First Parish in Concord was a central part of her life for 40 years, where she served as a volunteer and leader and formed lasting bonds within her community. Music was also a steady thread in her life; she loved singing in the church choir and was a founding member of First Parish’s By Your Side Singers, a pastoral choir that visited members at home or in the hospital.
She is predeceased by her parents, Idolize and Richard Pike of Melrose, Massachusetts, and her brother Richard Pike of Atherton, California.
She is survived by her husband of 57 years, Richard Keleher; her son, Jonathan Keleher; her daughter, Sarah (Keleher) Napoline; her son-in-law, J. Wesley Napoline; and a large circle of beloved cousins, siblings-in-law, nieces, nephews, and grand-nieces. Kate will be remembered for her intelligence, her humor, her artistic spirit, her fierce sense of justice, and for the way she saw the best in people, even when they could not yet see it in themselves. Her warmth often arrived wrapped in perfectly timed sarcasm, but those who knew her best understood that kindness was always at its heart.
She was returned to the good green earth in a private interment on July 2, 2026 at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Massachusetts. A public memorial service will be held at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, contributions in Kate’s memory may be made to Planned Parenthood or First Parish in Concord (call 978-369-9602, Contact@FirstParish.org).
Arrangements have been entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord.
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
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