John Cameron was born in Inverscadale by Loch Linnhe on 16 August 1771.[3] He was one of six children of Sir Ewen Cameron, 1st Baronet, of Fassiefern in the parish of Kilmallie, and his first wife, Louisa (daughter of Duncan Campbell of Barcaldine and Glenure),[2][4][a] Nursed by the wife of a family retainer whose son, Ewen McMillan, was his foster-brother and faithful attendant through life, young Cameron grew up in close sympathy with the traditions and associations of his home and people, who looked to his father as the representative head of the clan in the enforced absence of the chief of Lochiel. He received his schooling in part at Fort WilliamGrammar School, but chiefly by private tuition, before going to King's College, Aberdeen. Cameron was then articled as a clerk in Edinburgh to James Fraser of Gorthleck, WS.[3]
During the Waterloo Campaign, Cameron's 92nd Foot alongside the 42nd Highlanders, 1st Royals, and 44th East Essex, formed General Pack's 9th Brigade of Sir Thomas Picton's 5th Division, and were among the first troops to march out of Brussels at daybreak on 16 June 1815. On that day, when leading his regiment in an attack on an enemy stronghold on the road to Charleroi near the village of Quatre-Bras, Cameron was mortally wounded. He died the following morning and was buried there at the side of the road to Ghent road, during the great storm of the 17th by his foster brother and faithful attendant, Private Ewen McMillan, (who had followed his fortunes from the first day he joined the Army), James Gordon, Regimental-Paymaster and a close personal friend, and a few soldiers of the regiment whose wounds prevented them engaging in combat on that day.[1] Harold Chisholm played an important part on the day that John Cameron was shot: From the Inverness Courier. Death of a veteran. An old Peninsular soldier, Harold Chisholm of the 92nd Foot, died here last week. Chisholm loved to talk of the bravery of Colonel Cameron of the 92nd, and he assisted in carrying him off the field when fatally wounded at Quatre Bras. On returning from the melancholy task, the party met the Duke of Wellington, and Chisholm conducted the Duke to the house in the village of Quatre Bras where Colonel Cameron lay. The Duke, he said, "was much affected and remained some minutes with the dying officer". Chisholm was known to Wellington because he had saved his life that day. There is also a report in the Dublin University magazine vol 43, page 540, concerning the battle of Quatre Bras. " Private Harold Chisholm unfixed his bayonet and fired at the chasseurs".
At the request of his family, Cameron's remains were disinterred soon afterwards, brought home in a man-of-war and, in the presence of a gathering of three thousand highlanders from the then still populous district of Lochaber, were laid to rest in Kilmalliechurchyard where an obelisk inscribed with a quotation by Sir Walter Scott marks the site of his grave.[7][b]
Sir Ewen Cameron died in 1828 at the age of ninety, when Cameron's younger brother succeeded as Sir Duncan Cameron, 2nd and last baronet.[7] The Cameron baronetcy of Fassiefern became extinct in 1863.
Gules three Bars Or on a Bend Ermine a Sphinx between two Wreaths of Laurel Proper and on a Chief embattled a View of a Fortified Town inscribed thereunder Acre (augmentations of honour granted to Cameron by King George III).[2]
^In 1858, a memoir of Cameron was compiled from family sources by the Revd Archibald Clerk LLD, Minister of Kilmallie, two editions of which were privately printed in Glasgow. In addition to many interesting details, which testify to the keen personal interest taken by Cameron in his highland soldiers and to his kindly nature, the work contains a well-executed lithographic portrait of him in regimental full dress, wearing the insignia of the Order of the Tower and Sword, with other decorations, after an engraved portrait taken just before his death, and published by C. Turner, London, 1815 (Clerk 1858; Chichester 1886, p. 298).
Burke, John; Burke, John Bernard (1985) [1841]. A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England (reprint ed.). Baltimore, Maryland, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company.
Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003a). Burke's Peerage & Baronetage. Vol. 2 (107th in three volumes ed.). London: Burke's Peerage & Gentry. p. 2549.