Spade is an English surname and word name, originally tied to the digging tool.
Spade carries the weight of multiple intersecting histories. As an English word, it traces to the Old English spadu and proto-Germanic *spadô — the digging implement whose honest labor has made it a symbol of directness and plain dealing (to "call a spade a spade" is to speak bluntly, a phrase recorded as far back as ancient Greek, where Plutarch attributed it to Philip of Macedon). As a suit of playing cards, the spade descends from the Italian and Spanish espada, meaning sword — the spade suit in Italian tarot decks was literally depicted as a sword, carrying associations with intellect, conflict, and decisive action.
The name gained its most indelible cultural imprint through Sam Spade, the hard-boiled San Francisco detective created by Dashiell Hammett in the 1929 novel The Maltese Falcon. Humphrey Bogart's portrayal in the 1941 film cemented Spade as an archetype: morally complex, unsentimental, icily competent. The name became synonymous with a certain kind of American masculine cool — tough, taciturn, unimpressed.
More recently, the fashion designer Kate Spade brought the surname into a different register entirely, associating it with wit, accessibility, and New York style. As a given name, Spade is exceptionally rare and decidedly bold. It belongs to a growing category of noun names — Ace, Stone, Flint, Arrow — that parents choose to project strength and individuality.
Unlike many such names, Spade carries genuine cultural depth: centuries of symbolic resonance across card games, detective fiction, and the honest labor of the earth. A child named Spade inherits a name that is simultaneously ancient in origin and unmistakably modern in its audacity.