Marjory Jarman[a] (13 August 1901 – 1 January 1981), also known as Jammie[3] or Jamie[4] was an English Girl Guide leader.
She was a member of the Guide International Service (GIS), with whom she volunteered in Cairo, Egypt and Piraeus, Greece after WWII.
[11] In 1919, she appeared in a music concert presented by Cambridge Guides, together with Marguerite de Beaumont, who would go on to write biographies of Lord and Lady Baden-Powell.
On the same day "250 Greek soldiers, thirty-six women (six of them pregnant) and ten babies arrived" at the centre, seeking shelter, food and medical aid.
The British Army had provided the centre with two days' worth of rations and the team had "one tin-opener, one knife and one first-aid kit" between them.
In September 1945 it was reported in an Australian newspaper that "the nerves of the Greek women were so strained after years of Nazi occupation that they shed floods of tears when handed cups of hot tea by the Guides.