In 1878, he entered the service of the British Steam Navigation Company, in which he remained until 1882, visiting many parts of the globe. That same year he fought in the Mahdist War and served as assistant correspondent to the Daily Telegraphat the time of the engagement of Tel-el-Kebir.[1] He then went to Canada for 11 years and fought in the North-West Rebellion as one of "French's Scouts" under Lord Minto, earning the North West Canada Medal and clasp.[2]
Next, Gifford went to South Africa and became general manager of the Bechuanaland Exploration Company and soon became involved in the First Matabele War, 1893.[3] In the Second Matabele War, 1896, he was part of the Bulawayo Field Force during the Siege of Bulawayo, raised Gifford's Horse, and lost his right arm to a Nbatabele bullet.[4]
He married Marguerite Thorold, the daughter of Captain Thorold of Boothby Pagnell, on 21 September 1897. Among the presents that Gifford gave to his wife at the wedding was the bullet that cost him his arm. He set it in Matabele gold and arranged it so that the yellow metal formed a double-headed serpent.[3] He lived at Boothby Hall.[6]
On 1 July 1910, while undergoing a rest cure for nervous breakdown, Gifford met his death from a fire caused by his clothes being set alight by a cigarette.[7] He had been cleaning his clothing with petrol just before the incident.[8]
^"The Hon. Maurice Gifford. Fatal Burning Accident". The Sydney Morning Herald. 5 July 1910. p. 7. The Hon. Maurice Raymond Gifford, C.M.G., while undergoing the rest cure at Hoddesdon, a village near Hereford, was discovered rushing through the garden in a mass of flames. Before dying, he said that he had been cleaning his clothes with petrol, when he lighted a cigarette. A doctor stated at the Inquest that deceased had been suffering from acute nervous prostration. A verdict of accidental death was returned.
^"FinestHour"(pdf). Journal of the Churchill Center and Societies, Summer 2005. Archived(PDF) from the original on 8 August 2007. Retrieved 2 August 2007.