François Bigot (born Jan. 30, 1703, Bordeaux, Fr.—died Jan. 12, 1778, Neuchâtel, Switz.) was a French civil servant, lawyer, and the last intendant of New France (1748–60), whose corrupt administration aided the British conquest of Canada.
After entering the civil service, Bigot was appointed naval commissary at Rochefort, Fr., in 1731. He became commissary at Louisbourg, on Cape Breton Island (now in Nova Scotia), in 1739 and may have been responsible for failing to fortify it properly, thus aiding its capture by Anglo-American forces in 1745. In that year he returned to France and supervised an unsuccessful expedition against Nova Scotia (1746).
On assuming the powers of the intendant of New France in 1746, Bigot set up partnerships with several companies and individuals in order to control the colony’s economy. Arriving in Quebec in 1748 with more practical power than the governor, he perpetrated enormous frauds: he used a false name to retail goods to the public and the government while making a vast profit; and he appropriated military and Indian supplies. He was recalled to France to answer charges in 1754 but, reassured of his safety, returned to New France to impose an unjust corn and flour trade policy for his own enrichment. The colony’s growing economic chaos seriously weakened its resistance to British attack and contributed greatly to its surrender in 1760. Bigot returned that year to France, where he was arrested and imprisoned in the Bastille for 11 months, fined, and compelled to make restitution. He was then banished from France and died impoverished in Swiss exile.