Thomas Johnstone Carlyle Gifford (14 January 1881 - 24 January 1975) was one of the founders of Baillie Gifford, one of the United Kingdom's largest firms of investment managers.
Born at Ingleston near Twynholm in Kirkcudbrightshire and educated at George Watson's College and Edinburgh University, Carlyle Gifford trained with the firm of W.S. Cook and became a Writer to the Signet in 1905.[1]
In 1907 he co-founded the legal firm of Baillie Gifford WS which in 1909 formed and then acted as manager of The Scottish Mortgage and Trust Company Limited.[2]
He specialised in Land law and in Stock Exchange rules.[1] He served on the Boards of Scottish Widows and Edinburgh University.[1]
He helped set up the Association of Investment Trust Companies in 1929 and served as Chairman from 1934 to 1936.[1]
During World War II he worked in the United States where he acted as an agent for HM Treasury selling British overseas investments.[3]
He lived in Edinburgh and died there in 1975.[4]
In 1907 he married Maud Oriel Riata Pearson daughter of Charles Henry Pearson and together they went on to have two sons.[1] In 1960 he married again to Sophia Mary Wharton Millar who survived him.[1]