Aged 19 on the outbreak of the
Second World War, Jamieson was considered too young for overseas service and did not initially go with the battalion to join the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) when it went to France in 1940 but followed later. The battalion was assigned to
pioneer duties in France with the BEF. In May 1940, it was attached to the
51st (Highland) Infantry Division which was stationed on the
Maginot Line and therefore escaped encirclement with the majority of the BEF during the
Battle of France. The 7th Royal Norfolks suffered heavy casualties when the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division was surrounded and forced to surrender on 12 June 1940, with only 31 members of the battalion managing to return to Britain. When the majority of the battalion was captured at
Saint-Valery-en-Caux, he was at
Rouen and was able to return to Britain. The battalion was reformed in 1941 and Jamieson was promoted to
company commander of D Company. In 1942, the battalion was transferred to the
176th Infantry Brigade of the
59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division. The 59th Division, commanded by Major General
Lewis Lyne, was one of the follow-up units after the
Normandy landings in June 1944. The battalion was involved in the
Battle of Normandy, including the capture of
Caen during
Operation Charnwood, where the battalion suffered over 150 casualties, which was followed by the
Second Battle of the Odon. For his leadership
Ian Freeland was appointed a Companion of the
Distinguished Service Order (DSO).
Victoria Cross Jamieson was a 23-year-old
captain in the 7th Battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment, part of the 176th Infantry Brigade attached to the 59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division, when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the
Victoria Cross. On 7/8 August 1944, south of
Grimbosq,
Normandy, France, Jamieson was in command of D Company, being the only officer remaining, which had established a bridgehead over the
River Orne. The enemy made seven counter-attacks on the company's position by elements of the
271st Volksgrenadier Division and
12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, but throughout 36 hours of bitter and close fighting Captain Jamieson's company refused to give up. The attacks included assaults with
Tiger and
Panther tanks which shot up the
Churchill tanks supporting the Royal Norfolks. Jamieson was giving map references for British artillery; directing the resources of first the divisional artillery, then the medium artillery of the corps. Jamieson at one point mounted the last British tank to talk to the commander under enemy fire in order to direct the tank to retreat. He dismissed it as anything heroic, saying that he had to as the telephone didn't work – tanks were equipped with an external handset so that the commander could talk to an infantry commander without opening the hatch. The image of Captain Jamieson riding a Churchill tank while enemy tanks attacked was immortalised in a painting. As he was talking to the commander, the tank was hit and Jamieson blown off. He returned to his "hole" where he received treatment - he had lost an eye and was bleeding from his arm. After relief by another battalion, Jamieson was evacuated to a first aid post and then back to the UK. The citation for Jamieson in the
London Gazette supplement of 26 October 1944 reads, in part: ==Post-war==