Pigott was born in Ottawa on May 20, 1924, the eldest of three children born to Cecil Morrison and Margaret Cotter. The daughter of Ottawa businessman George Morrison, Pigott's family has lived in the
Ottawa Valley for four generations. She attended
Ottawa Ladies' College and studied at Belleville's
Albert College for a year, before joining the office staff at her family's business, Morrison Lamothe Bakery. In 1948, she hired Arthur Pigott, an accountant, to serve as her assistant manager. The two married in 1955 and Pigott left her job at the bakery. They had three children between 1957 and 1963. By the 1960s, Morrison Lamothe had expanded into 30 shops and restaurants and a 1,000-employee workforce, but it was struggling financially due to a bread
price war and the opening of a new, $5 million plant in Ottawa's east end. In 1966, Pigott rejoined the company and became its president and CEO. She closed the new factory, returning operations to their abandoned factory which was scheduled to be demolished, laid off 600 staff, sold off several subsidiaries, and persuaded creditors to freeze the company's overdue accounts. Within a year, the company turned its first profit in five years and expanded into frozen foods. In 1972, Pigott became the first woman to sit on the
board of directors of
Ontario Hydro. In 1973, she joined Ontario Premier
Bill Davis as part of a trade delegation to the United Kingdom. == Member of Parliament ==