The only son and younger child of Neil Cameron (a retired company sergeant major in the Seaforth Highlanders) and his wife, Isabella Cameron (née Stewart),[1] Cameron was brought up by his mother and grandfather in Perth, his father having died when he was three weeks old.[2] Cameron attended the Northern District School and took up employment with the Commercial Bank of Scotland in the Fife town of Newburgh in 1937.[2]
Cameron went on to be an advisor to No. 335 (Hellenic) Squadron in April 1943 and, having been mentioned in despatches on 2 June 1943,[7] he joined the Air Staff responsible for Fighter Operations at Headquarters No. 224 Group in October 1943.[2] He became Officer Commanding No. 258 Squadron operating in Burma in February 1944 and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross on 21 November 1944[8] and appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order on 2 October 1945.[9]
Cameron transferred from the RAF Volunteer Reserve to the Royal Air Force after the War ended and was given a permanent commission as a flight lieutenant on 1 September 1945.[10] He became an instructor at the School of Air Support at Old Sarum in October 1945 and went on to be RAF Liaison Officer at Headquarters Rhine Army in April 1948.[2] He attended RAF Staff College in 1949 and later that year joined the Air Staff in the Directorate of Organisation at the Air Ministry.[2]
Cameron was promoted to squadron leader on 1 January 1950[11] but spent much of that year and the next incapacitated because of a severe case of infective endocarditis.[2] He was selected for Aircrew Selection Duties at the Air Ministry in January 1952 before joining the Directing Staff at the RAF Staff College in December 1953.[2] Having been promoted to wing commander on 1 January 1956,[12] but still recovering from illness, he became Officer Commanding the University of London Air Squadron in August 1956.[2] He became Personal Staff Officer to the Chief of the Air Staff in November 1958,[2] and having been promoted to group captain on 1 July 1960,[13] he became Officer Commanding RAF Abingdon in November 1960.[2] He attended Imperial Defence College in 1963 and became Principal Staff Officer to Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe at the end of the year.[2]
Air officer
Promoted to air commodore on 1 July 1964,[14] Cameron joined the Staff at the RAF College Cranwell in February 1965 becoming Assistant Commandant there a few months later.[2] He became RAF Member of Programme Evaluation Group in September 1966, and having been appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1967 Birthday Honours,[15] he became Assistant Chief of Defence Staff in February 1968.[2] Promoted to air vice marshal on 1 July 1968,[16] he became Senior Air Staff Officer at Headquarters Air Support Command in September 1970.[2]
Cameron became Chief of the Defence Staff on 31 August 1977.[25] In that role he secured pay comparability for services personnel involved in civil support during the firemen's strike, visited the People's Republic of China and lectured extensively on the Soviet air threat.[23] He retired in August 1979.[2]