Ivy Olive Gibbs (c. 1886 – 3 October 1966) was a trans-Tasman poet and children's writer based predominantly in New Zealand.
Children's verses by Gibbs appeared in The Christian Science Monitor in Boston, North America, 1944–49.
After leaving Wellington in 1934, Pat Lawlor in his regular column ‘Among the Books’ for New Zealand Railways Magazine wrote: "Miss Ivy Gibbs, a writer of slender but charming verse, is now a resident of Napier.
Gibbs also wrote notable World War II poems: ‘Requiescat in Pace’[8] and ‘Death's No Enemy’[9] both first published in the New Zealand Herald and later The Advocate in Burnie.
From 1944-49, children's verse of hers appeared under her full name of ‘Ivy Olive Gibbs’ in the international newspaper The Christian Science Monitor in Boston, North America.