- DICTIONARY OF CANADIAN BIOGRAPHY ARTICLE: A. D. Gibbon, “BAYARD, ROBERT,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 9, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/bayard_robert_9E.html
- DCB profile notes:
- Doctor and writer; b. in 1788 at Wilmot, N.S., son of Colonel Samuel Vetch Bayard of the King’s Orange Rangers; m. 31 Dec. 1812 Frances Catherine Robertson of Halifax, and they had at least three children; d. 4 June 1868 at Welsford, N.B.
- Descended from the Chevalier de Bayard of 16th century France, Robert Bayard’s family was prominent in New York before the American War of Independence. His father settled at Wilmot at the conclusion of the war and was appointed lieutenant-colonel of the Royal Nova Scotia Regiment. Robert Bayard became a lieutenant in the British army at age 13, but was permitted to study at King’s Collegiate School, Windsor, N.S. He eventually gave up his commission, and after reading medicine for a short time entered the University of Edinburgh from which he graduated with a medical degree in 1809. His graduate thesis was on complicated labour, anaesthesia in obstetrics, and bloodletting. In 1811 the degree of dcl was conferred on him by King’s College, Windsor.
- Bayard then became professor of obstetrics at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the University of the State of New York, but during the War of 1812 chose to leave the country rather than take the oath of allegiance. He made his way to Portland, Maine, then, sailing in an open boat, to Saint John, N.B., in May 1813. After moving to Halifax, N.S., he settled with his wife in Kentville, N.S., where a son was born in 1814 and where Bayard practised until 1823.
- That year they moved to Saint John where Bayard took a front place in the medical profession. He wrote at least two medical works, Exposition of facts relative to a case of croup and Evidences of the delusions of homoeopathy. A versatile person, he interested himself in the advancement of agriculture by speaking and writing and showed a taste for controversy. In August 1846 his writing in the press ended a movement for a public hospital, planned as a memorial to the loyalists. Excluded from the founding meeting of the project, Bayard criticized the private deliberations of the organizers and suggested instead that a public infirmary be added to the Marine Hospital. In 1849 he spoke out strongly for the route of the proposed European and North American Railway from Saint John to Shediac, which became a reality in 1857.
- Son of Proven Loyalist listed in Loyalist Directory –https://uelac.ca/loyalist-directory/detail/?wpda_search_column_id=437
- Find a GRAVE: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/214922107/robert-bayard
