From Old English meaning 'king's ford,' combining Latin 'rex' (king) with a river crossing.
Rexford is a compound English surname pressed into service as a given name, built from two elements that together conjure an almost cinematically American landscape. The second element, "ford," is the Old English word for a shallow river crossing — one of the most common building blocks of English place names (Oxford, Hereford, Bradford) — marking points where communities gathered and trade routes crossed. The first element is more complex: though "rex" is the Latin word for king, in English place-name formation it more likely entered through the Old English "rēc" or early Norman influence, suggesting a royal holding or a ford near a prominent estate rather than a literal king's crossing.
As a given name, Rexford belongs to a distinctly American tradition of adopting surnames — particularly those with place-name origins — as first names for boys, a practice that gained momentum in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Names like Crawford, Clifford, and Bradford followed the same pattern, projecting landed solidity and ancestral rootedness. Rexford Tugwell, a prominent member of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal brain trust and later Governor of Puerto Rico, stands as one of the name's notable mid-century bearers, associating it with reform-minded intellectualism.
Rexford never achieved mainstream popularity, which paradoxically is much of its appeal today. It carries the robust, slightly antiquated authority of the Rex- prefix — immediately suggesting strength and stature — without the bluntness of Rex alone. For parents seeking vintage American names with genuine historical grounding rather than recent invention, Rexford offers something rare: a name that feels both authentically old and genuinely fresh.