Person:Pierre Cyr (1)

m. 10 Apr 1670
  1. Jean CyrAbt 1671 - 1741
  2. Jean-Pierre Cyr1676 - 1759
  3. Guillaume CyrAbt 1679 - Bef 1740
Facts and Events
Name Pierre Cyr
Alt Name _____ Sire
Alt Name _____ Syre
Gender Male
Birth? 1644 Cuoprevay, Champange, France
Marriage 10 Apr 1670 Port Royal, Acadiato Marie Bourgeois
Census[1] 1671 Port Royal, Acadie
Occupation[1] 1671 Port Royal, AcadieArmurier
Census 1671 Port Royal, Acadiawith Marie Bourgeois
Death? 1679 Beaubassin, Acadia, New France
Other? Arrived From France 1666-1669 At Acadie

!NAME: Spelled SIRE; also CIRE on 1686 census, when mentioning widow. SIRE on widow's remarriage record.

!DEATH: Must have been about 1680; last son Guillaume born abt 1680, widow remarried on 9 JUN 1680.

[AEIOU1.FTW]

They have 11 cattle. 6 sheep and do not have any land in cultivation. The first member of the Cyr family in the New World was probably Pierre Sire/Sirre/Cyr, born in France around 1644, perhaps in Tourraine-en-Loire. A gunsmith by profession, we know he was in Acadia around 1668, living in Port Royal.

Pierre married Marie Bourgeois on April 10, 1670, in Port Royal. She was the daughter of Jacques Bourgeois, who had been a military surgeon and who had become by that time a merchant and trader along La Baie Française, now called the Bay of Fundy. Her mother was Jeanne Trahan.

On June 18, 1670, Pierre Sirre signed an agreement with the parishioners of Port-Royal concerning the construction of the new church and the guidelines for officials weights and measures in the colony. We also know from the 1671 Port Royal census that Pierre, a 27 year old arms manufacturer and his wife, Marie Bourgeois, 18 years old, have a 3 month old son, Jean. They have 11 cattle, 6 sheep and do not have any land in cultivation.

Some time around 1672, Pierre’s father-in-law Jacques Bourgeois decided to establish a new colony -- the Bourgeois colony (Beaubassin, in Chignectou). The settlement is at the lower end of La Baie Française near the modern border of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The first dwellings are built on a height of land bordering southern bank of the Missagoueche River. The new colony prospers, and they quickly build a flour mill and sawmill (with the equipment shipped from Boston in pieces).

In 1676, their second son, Pierre, is born in Beaubassin. Three years later, a third son, Guillaume, is born there as well.

Later that same year, in 1679, Pierre died and was buried at Beaubassin. His young widow remarries the following year, to Germain Girouard, and has three more children. In 1686, Marie again becomes a widow. She spends her final years living with her son Guillaume. She dies in Beaubassin, on March 3, 1741, with her sons, Jean-Baptiste (I) and Pierre, present at her burial. Her death certificate lists her as 88 years old.

Jean-Baptiste (I) married Francoise Melanson in 1692 in Beaubassin. They would have nine children: Jean-Baptiste (II); Pierre; Julien; Marie; Marguerite; Michel; Paul; Anne; and Francoise. Jean-Baptiste died in 1741 and was buried in Beaubassin.

By the early 1700's, the tensions between the "French Neutrals" and the English were rising daily, and finally -- on September 5, 1755, under the order of Lieutenant Governor Lawrence, the British Governor of Acadia -- the expulsion of the Acadians began. With the beginning of Le Grand Derangement, the Cyr family would be scattered across North America.

Jean-Baptiste (II) would settle in the area of Sainte-Anne-des-Pays-Bas (modern day Fredericton, New Brunswick), which had been the scene of one of the only major victories by the Acadians against the British. The only Deportation ship ever captured by the Acadians, the Pembroke, and its settlers fled to the St. John River community in New Brunswick, under the protection of Boishébert. The Acadians cleared land and settled down, hoping to have their land grants approved by the British government after the war with France was over.

In 1784, English Loyalists, fleeing the United States in the aftermath of the American Revolution, would forcibly evict the Acadians from their new homes. Jean Baptiste would sign a number of petitions sent to the officials of Quebec and New Brunswick asking for redress, to no avail. Jean-Baptiste Cyr dit Croque is reported to have said: "My God, can it be true that you have made no lands for the Cayens [Acadians]?" In 1785, the Acadians sent a petition to the officials of Quebec and New Brunswick, to obtain land in the Madawaska area. Twenty-four Acadians and Canadians signed the petition for land grants a mile-and-a-half south of the Madawaska River Falls. The Acadian petitioners were: Louis Mercure, Jean Martin, Joseph Daigle Sr., Joseph Daigle Jr., Daniel Gaudin, Simon Martin, Paul-Francois Cyr, Joseph Cyr Jr., Pierre Cyr, Jean-Baptiste Cyr, Firmin Cyr, Alexandre Ayotte and Francois Martin. The Canadian petitioners were: Pierre Duperry, Jean Lizotte, Pierre Lizotte, Augustin Dube, Robert Fournier and Louis Sansfacon. Another petition in the Canadian Archives, was addressed to the Governor-General of Canada, and was signed by Jean-Baptiste Cyr, his wife Marguerite Cormier and his nine sons, Pierre, Olivier, Francois, Antoine, Paul, Jacques, Joseph, Firmin and Jean-Baptiste Jr., as well as Alexandre Ayotte, Zacharie Ayotte, Joseph Daigle Sr., Joseph Daigle Jr., Olivier Thibodeau and Louis Sansfacon.

After receiving the promise of land grants from the British authorities, Jean-Baptiste Cyr called for a meeting at his home, where it was decided that half of the colony would go to the Madawaska and the other half would be divided among Amon, Memramcook, Miramichi, Tracadie, Caraquet and Bathurst. Jean-Baptiste would not make the trip. He died that same year, and was buried at "Crock's Point".

Determined to live free of further English interference, these families traveled up the St. John Valley, beyond Grand Falls -- where the British ships could not follow -- to the area called "the Madawaska", the Native American word for "the Land of the Porcupine..." They settled in June, 1785, on the banks of the St. John River. The Acadians has finally found a new home. By 1790, the British would finally affirm the land claims for the Acadian families on the banks of the St. John.

By the time of the 1831 Maine survey, Jean Baptiste's son Antoine Rotatine was recorded as living on the south side of the river.

On August 16, 1792, in St. Basile, N.B., Antoine marred Marie Genevieve Violette. Marie Genevieve was the daughter of Francois Violette and Marie Luce Thibodeau. They had eleven children: Marie Salome; Marie Rose; Victoire; Genevieve; Elizabeth; Marie-Louise (Lizette); Marie-Luce; Scholastique; Marguerite; Jean Germain (Jeremie); Marguerite (II); and Desire.

Their daughter Marie-Luce was born on May 24, 1806, in St. Basile. She was named for her grandmother Thibodeau, and on July 16, 1792, she married Francois Martin in St. Basile. They would have at least two children: Julie and Damase.

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Nova Scotia, Canada. Recensements d'Acadie (1671 - 1752)
    pg. 6.

    Recensement 1671, Port Royal, Acadie
    "Armurier - PIERRE SIRE aagé de 27 ans, sa femme Marie Bourgeois aagée de 18 ans, Leur enfans un garson nommé Jehan 3 mois, Leurs bestiaux a cornes onxe pieces et six brebis, point de terre en Labour."

    !CENSUS: 1671, Acadia, Port Royal, in Canada. Archives des Colonies. Acadie, Recensements; 1671-1752; MG 1 (22, 24), vol. 466, part 1; pp. 1-13; microfilm copy at Santa Cruz Public Library, Genealogical Society Library, CANADA MF; filmed by Canada, Public Archives on 17 Feb 1960, this copy is machine numbered in upper right corner. p. [7], Pierre SIRE, "Armurier" [is this an armourer or a textile weaver?] age 27 years, living with his wife Marie BOURGEOIS, age 18, and their son named Jehan, age 3 months. They have eleven head of cattle and six sheep, with no land in cultivation. Karen Theriot Reader

  2.   Arsenault, Bona. Histoire et généalogie des Acadiens. (Quebec: Le Conseil de la Vie française en Amérique, 1965)
    p. 500 & p. 929.

    (Editions Lemeac) (Port Royal) & (Beaubassin);
    Pierre SIRE (also CYR) born in 1644, arrived in Acadia around 1668 and settled at Beaubassin, of which he was one of the first colonizers. A footnote says that a branch of the SIRE family settled in Que'bec, from which the ancestor who stayed on the Isles of St. Pierre and Miquelon, at the time of the dispersal of the Acadians, uses today the name of MIQUELON.
    On p. 929: Pierre SIRE, born in 1644, an [armurier], married around 1670 to Marie BOURGEOIS; three children Three sons listed, born 1671, 1678 and 1680. His widow married Germain GIROUARD in 1680.

  3.   White, Stephen A; Hector-J Hébert; and Patrice Gallant. Dictionnaire généalogique des familles acadiennes. (Moncton, Westmorland, New Brunswick, Canada: Centre d'études acadiennes, Université de Moncton, 1999)
    p. 433.