Every surname contains a buried history. Names carry hidden social histories. Alfred Long's Personal And Family Names is a popular monograph from the nineteenth century that explores the origins and history of the nomenclature of present and former times. Written with Victorian precision and humane curiosity, it surveys the history of surnames and the origins of family names across linguistic, geographic and social lines, offering clear etymology of names and thoughtful notes on naming traditions. At once a surname origins compendium and a family historians guide, it blends early nomenclature studies with accessible prose, serving as a practical genealogy reference book for researchers of genealogy and for anyone intrigued by English naming customs. An organised account with practical pointers helps readers investigate their own surname, making the volume both companion and compendium. Long's approachable voice turns philological detail into story; the result is quietly human - language and lineage in conversation, useful to casual readers and to specialists building an onomastics collection. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. As a Victorian-era reference it captures nineteenth-century approaches to naming traditions and offers a clear window onto English social history; casual readers tracing ancestry and researchers of genealogy find methodical explanations and illuminating etymology of names. Historically it sits among early onomastic scholarship and gives distinctive perspective on how Victorians thought about identity, origin and class. Classic-literature collectors and curators of onomastics collections will value its steady scholarship and period voice, while family historians seeking a concise, practical guide may use it as a dependable surname origins compendium and an accessible genealogy reference book. Practical enough to assist a first enquiry and learned enough to reward connoisseurs, Long's monograph sits comfortably between handbook and cultural essay. Its approachable scholarship suits researchers of genealogy working with local archives, and its period examples reward readers curious about the social meanings embedded in names.