Stryker likely developed from a surname tied to striking or battle, giving it a strong martial feel.
Stryker is an occupational surname of Germanic and Dutch origin, derived from a word meaning "one who strikes" or, more specifically, a craftsman who used a strickle — a flat board drawn across the top of a grain measure to level it off and ensure a fair, accurate count. From the low-tech precision of the grain market to the modern naming vocabulary is a long journey, but occupational surnames have always carried an implied dignity of craft and honest labor. In the twentieth century, Stryker accumulated a range of powerful cultural associations.
The Stryker Corporation, founded in 1941, became one of the world's leading medical device companies, associating the name with surgical precision and life-saving innovation. S. Army's Stryker combat vehicle — an eight-wheeled armored personnel carrier that saw extensive service in Iraq and Afghanistan — made the word synonymous with military strength and tactical modernity.
These twin associations — medical precision and military force — give the name an unusual combination of connotations: decisive, capable, protective. As a first name, Stryker belongs to the rising category of strong-consonant surname-names favored by parents seeking something that sounds unambiguously powerful while remaining distinctive. It shares phonetic territory with Ryder, Hunter, and Tucker — names with a working, kinetic energy — while its initial str- cluster gives it additional forcefulness.
It is almost exclusively masculine in usage and reads as confidently American: frontier-spirited, direct, without ornament. A name that announces itself without asking permission.