In 1922
Allen Mawer read a paper to the
British Academy proposing a survey of English place-names. He obtained the formal and financial support of the academy. Within a year he had brought into being a society composed of interested persons, provided it with a constitution, and laid down the lines of its future conduct. The headquarters of the Society were first at the
University of Liverpool, where Mawer was professor of the English language. The publications of the Society began in 1924, with two volumes: a collection of essays and a dictionary of place-name elements. Mawer and Aileen Armstrong acted as general editors for the annual volumes of county place-name surveys. Starting in 1929, J. E. B. Gover collected material and was sub-editor of the volumes. In 1929, Mawer was appointed provost of
University College, London, and the Society moved there at the end of the year. At the outbreak of World War II, the Society removed briefly to
University College, Aberystwyth, back to London, and then to Stansted Bury,
Stanstead Abbotts, in eastern
Hertfordshire. In July 1942, Sir Allen Mawer died, and Sir
Frank Stenton became general editor. The Society moved to the
University of Reading until 1946. When
Bruce Dickins succeeded as honorary director, the Society removed to the
University of Cambridge and
Margaret Midgley (later Gelling) was appointed research assistant. When
Hugh Smith assumed the position of honorary director in 1951, University College, London, became once more the Society's headquarters, with Midgley continuing research there until 1953. Hugh Smith produced two new "Elements" volumes and 14 others on county place-names. Upon his death in 1967,
Kenneth Cameron became honorary director and the Society's offices were split between London and Nottingham, where the university provided room for the library and archives, as well as the services of a secretary. In 1972 the Society moved completely to Nottingham, where it remains at the Centre for Name Studies.
Victor Watts became honorary director in 1992 until his death in 2002, when he was succeeded by
Richard Coates. The survey has been consistently supported, morally and practically, by the
British Academy. From 2005 to 2010, it was supported as well by a large grant from the
Arts and Humanities Research Council. ==Research breakthroughs==