Type | Specialty ice cream and yogurts |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1938 |
Founder(s) | John Nash Gifford |
Headquarters | Silver Spring, MD |
Products | Ice Cream |
Owner(s) | Marcelo Ramagem and Neal Lieberman |
Website | http://www.giffords.com/index.cfm |
Gifford's is a brand of ice cream manufactured and sold in the Washington, D.C., area. It is known for using natural ingredients including viscosity modifiers such as guar gum and seaweed-derived carrageenan and having a high butterfat content.[1]
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Gifford's Ice Cream & Candy Co. was founded in 1938 by John Nash Gifford. In the same year, he opened the first Gifford's on Georgia Avenue in Silver Spring, Maryland, where he sold his six original ice cream flavors.[2] In 1940, he opened a second location on Wisconsin Avenue in Bethesda. Until 1985, all Gifford's locations were large, old-fashioned ice cream parlors. John Gifford served as the company's president until his death in 1976, when the business was passed on to his son, Robert Gifford.
In 1984, Gifford's filed for bankruptcy protection due to approximately $200,000 of debt.[3] In 1985, a Baltimore bankruptcy judge ruled to liquidate the company's assets to pay an estimated $350,000 debt.[4] At that time, the Gifford's name, logo, and recipes were purchased for $1,500.[5]
In 1986 or 1987, Dolly Hunt and her son, James, bought the rights to the company and opened a new Gifford's on Wisconsin Avenue, which had its official opening on July 4, 1989.[6] In July 2006, a new 8,200-square-foot (760 m2) factory was opened.
The company was sold in March 2010, and split into two parts, wholesale and retail. Due to much bickering and lawsuits, all the retail locations are closed. [7]
Select flavors of Gifford's ice cream is sold in pint containers in area specialty food stores, including Whole Foods Market and Harris Teeter.[8] As of August 2006, more than 70 restaurants in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area serve Gifford's ice cream.[9] Beginning in 2008, Gifford's was added as a concession at Nationals Park. This was replaced by Breyers in 2011. [10][11]