As governor of Fort St. George Pigot proved a vigorous and autocratic administrator and a courageous soldier, defending Madras successfully against Lally in 1758-9, and completing the peace negotiations in 1762. He resigned his governorship on 14 Nov. 1763, and returned to England. Luke Scrafton wrote to Clive, 9 Dec. 1765: ‘I understand his great fortune was acquired by lending money to Mohammed Ali [the Nawab of Arcot] and the Zemindars at two and three per cent per month.’
On his return to England, Pigot attached himself to the Government, treading in the steps of Lord Clive,
He next set to work, again with Grenville’s help, to form a family group of his own in Parliament. On the death of Jonathan Rashleigh, 24 Nov. 1764, Pigot offered his son Philip 2,000 guineas if he would bring in Pigot’s brother at Fowey, but met with a refusal. In 1765 Thomas Lockyer’s son Joseph was dying, and attempts were made to persuade him to vacate his seat at Ilchester: on 7 Mar. Lord Egmont reported to Grenville that he had ‘settled the affair’ between Sir George Pigot and Thomas Lockyer, but on the 16th that Joseph refused; then on 25 Mar., in a covering note to a further letter from Thomas Lockyer, Egmont spoke of ‘the probability that Mr. Pigot [either Hugh or Robert] will become very soon representative for that borough’.
Pigot’s attachment, whatever favours he received from Grenville, was not to him but to Government as such; and on 8 Aug. 1765 Lord Temple wrote to Grenville that ‘the great Sir George Pigot of the vast diamond’ had ‘been performing the eastern adoration of that rising sun, Lord Rockingham, at his levee’.
Having in 1765 bought from Sir John Astley for about £100,000 the Patshull estate, some 10 miles from Bridgnorth, Pigot established an interest in the borough for which he was returned in 1768, ceding his seat at Wallingford to his brother Robert. His other brother Hugh was chosen at Penryn—on what interest is uncertain, but presumably with Government support. In the new Parliament, at least till 1772, the three brothers regularly voted with the Government; and even as late as February 1775, Lord Pigot, when expostulating with Lord North for supporting Rumbold against him for governor of Madras, claimed that he had ‘never voted against Government in his life, except on India affairs, when he thought himself bound to support the Company which gave him bread’.
Pigot’s revolt against the Government on East Indian affairs is seen most clearly at East India House: in the court of proprietors he came out vigorously with the Opposition interests led by the Duke of Richmond against the implementation of the Regulating Act of 1773.
It was no secret that ‘the distressed state of his circumstances’ was one reason for his wishing to return to India.
Going out with a reversal (apparently proposed by himself) of the Company’s policy with regard to the Nawab of Arcot and his feudatory, the Raja of Tanjore, Pigot was at first well-received in the presidency, but soon fell into violent conflict with the Nawab and with his own council, most of whom were deeply committed to the Nawab for financial reasons. An attempt to over-ride the council and suspend its leaders led to a coup de main, Pigot being seized and placed in confinement while his assailants took over the administration. George Stratton and Sir Robert Fletcher were the ostensible leaders, but a great part was played behind the scenes by the Nawab, Paul Benfield and John Macpherson. Both sides appealed to the Company, but the latter (with the support of Administration and after stormy general courts called by Admiral Hugh Pigot and his friends in Opposition) decided to reinstate Pigot but to recall all the parties concerned.
George III expressed a common view when he said: ‘I have not the smallest doubt but both parties have been stimulated by motives alone of private interest.’
