A popular Radical, Biggs was one of the most important political figures in Leicester between the late 1840s and early 1860s. His father and namesake had founded a hosiery business in Leicester in the late eighteenth century, which had become one of the town’s leading firms by his death in 1827, after which it was continued by John and his younger brothers, William (1805-81) and Joseph (1809-95).
In 1840 Biggs patented a method of attaching elastic wrist bands to gloves, which greatly increased the firm’s trade.
In the mid-1840s Leicester’s Reformers split. As leader of the Radical faction, Biggs favoured a general and extensive scheme of municipal improvement, including, controversially, a new town hall, whilst moderates preferred a more limited and cheaper option.
On the death of one of the incumbents, Biggs resigned as mayor in order to stand, and was returned unopposed by ‘an immense show of hands’, 18 June 1856.
It has been suggested that Biggs ‘made no particular mark’ at Parliament.
The Radicals triumphed at the 1859 general election, when Biggs topped the poll, and his colleague securing second place.
The 1859 election result marked the pinnacle of Biggs’s local influence, which was soon undermined by a series of shattering political and personal blows. The death of his colleague occasioned a by-election at which the moderate and Radical candidates were heavily defeated by a Conservative, 7 Feb. 1861.
Biggs spent the remainder of his life in much-reduced circumstances and maintaining a complete silence on public affairs.
