Soon after the Maher family emigrated to the United States, to
Amherst, Massachusetts, Margaret's sister, Mary, married Thomas Kelley (1832–1920), another south Tipperary immigrant on December 1, 1855. In scripting her own funeral, Emily Dickinson chose Tom for the role of her chief pallbearer (she selected five other Irish Catholic laborers as bearers: Dennis Cashman, Tom or Dan Moynihan, Dennis Scannell or Scanlon, Stephen Sullivan, and Pat Ward). Margaret's brother-in-law Tom Kelley, a laborer, bought property from Emily Dickinson's father,
Edward, in October 1864, that Tom had been leasing for his young family and Maher in-laws. This property included land with a dwelling house adjacent to the Dickinson Meadow and railroad depot off of Main Street in Amherst, about a quarter-mile from the
Dickinson Homestead. Although she slept under her employers' roofs, Margaret called this home. This Amherst property, known as "Kelley Square," eventually expanded to include a barn, three houses, and sheds, with gardens and fruit trees. The Maher siblings and their brother-in-law Tom Kelley expanded this multigenerational family compound through their combined wages, real estate investments, and
boarding house business. Margaret's brothers sent funds from California and Nevada where they worked as miners and cattle ranchers. Margaret's brother-in-law, Tom Kelley, worked as a laborer, railroad
track walker, and later night watchman for
Amherst College. Tom's association with and employment by Edward Dickinson, Amherst College treasurer, may have first brought Margaret Maher to the attention of the Dickinson family. == Meeting with Emily Dickinson ==