Bigsworth received training as a Mercantile Marine officer, later joining the
Royal Naval Reserve as a
sub-lieutenant, being promoted to
lieutenant on 19 January 1913. He attended the first course at the
Central Flying School, gaining his
Aviator's Certificate no. 396 on 21 January 1913. He transferred to the
Royal Navy at this rank with effect from 1 April 1913, achieving the rank of
wing commander in the
Royal Naval Air Service on 31 December 1916. On 1 April 1918 he was appointed Officer Commanding
No. 10 Group RAF; a year later he was awarded a permanent commission as a
lieutenant colonel and was appointed Staff Officer First Class (Air) in Headquarters, Mediterranean District. At this point Bigsworth was awarded a Permanent Commission with the RAF and was removed from the Navy Lists while remaining in his post with HQ Mediterranean District, later HQ Mediterranean Group in 1920. After almost three years as Officer Commanding, Armament and Gunnery School at
Eastchurch, he returned to the Mediterranean as Air Officer Commanding (AOC), HQ RAF Mediterranean, in which capacity he was appointed as a member of the Nominated Council of Malta. In 1925 he returned to the UK, first to
RAF Leuchars (1925), then as Senior Air Staff Office (SASO), HQ Coastal Area (1928), AOC No. 10 Group and finally, until his retirement in September 1935, as Director of Equipment at the Air Ministry. Immediately following his retirement from active service, Bigsworth was appointed to the Directorate of Aeronautical Production and in 1939 was for a short time AOC No 42 (Maintenance) Group. It has been claimed that
W. E. Johns based some aspects of his fictional hero
Biggles (surname Bigglesworth) on the real-life Bigsworth, with whom he had worked at the Air Ministry. ==Medals and honours==