Fairfield's family lived in
Littleton, Massachusetts, where her father was a
Unitarian minister. She worked to be able to afford the tuition fees at nearby
Boston University. On weekends, she would bribe the watchman to allow her access to the University's solar telescope on the roof (a telescope later named in her honour). She published an article on sunspot observations in
Popular Astronomy in 1916. Fairfield undertook her graduate studies with
W. W. Campbell of
Lick Observatory, was rejected from a job at the
General Electric Company on declaring that she eventually wanted to be an astronomer. Fairfield was an assistant professor in astronomy when she attended the
International Astronomical Union's (IAU) Third General Assembly in
Leiden in the Netherlands in 1928. Her assigned reception committee astronomer was a young graduate student,
Bart Bok, ten years her junior; he proposed to her at the end of the conference. They corresponded for the next year, as Fairfield did not wish to rush into marriage. Shapley was initially dubious of Bok, and protective of his protégée Priscilla. Evidently so, after meeting Bok in 1928, Fairfield's professional trajectory was initially influenced by household/child-caring responsibilities and her husband's career choices, both in terms of its substance and geographical location. Although she continued teaching during her children's upbringing, her research endeavors were somewhat hindered by familial obligations. Fairfield and her husband welcomed their son,
John, in 1930 and a daughter, Joyce, in 1933 coinciding with pivotal moments in Bok's career progression at Harvard. During their time in various Massachusetts locales, Fairfield juggled her role as a college tutor while Bok ascended as a university professor, often working twice the amount of weeks she did in a year. Once her children reached high school age, Fairfield found more opportunities to focus on her astronomical pursuits, albeit with lingering disparities in domestic responsibilities. Despite this, Fairfield contributed significantly to astronomical research, initially focusing on
comets and star motion in the 1920s before transitioning to mapping new regions of the Milky Way alongside her husband. ==Harvard==