English place-based name from Old English *stoc* (stock/settlement), meaning someone from a stockaded place.
Stokely is a surname of Old English composition — stoc (a settlement, a place, sometimes a holy place) combined with leah (a woodland clearing or meadow) — placing it in the large family of English place-derived surnames that describe where a family lived or originated. Stokeleys and Stokelys appear in English records from the medieval period onward, scattered across county registers as the kind of sturdy, land-tied surname that told anyone who heard it exactly what sort of ground a family had once worked. As a given name, Stokely is almost inseparable from one towering figure: Stokely Carmichael (1941–1998), the Trinidad-born civil rights leader who became one of the most electrifying voices of the movement's militant turn.
Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and later a figure in the Black Panther Party before emigrating to Guinea and renaming himself Kwame Ture, Carmichael coined the phrase "Black Power" in 1966, catalyzing a debate about self-determination that reverberated across decades. His use of Stokely — a quiet English surname in the mouth of one of the twentieth century's most radical voices — gave the name an indelible political and intellectual charge. For parents today, Stokely carries that historical resonance as both weight and gift.
It is a name with a biography before the child is born, one that arrives with a story of courage, confrontation, and conviction already attached. Like Malcolm or Rosa, it is a name that certain parents choose deliberately, as an act of cultural memory and aspiration — hoping a child will grow into the company of the name they carry.