Beedham was born in 1879 in
Whitecross Street,
Cripplegate,
London, and, at the age of 13, was apprenticed for six years to an old established firm of wood engravers, Hare & Company in Essex Street,
Strand. By the end of his apprenticeship he found that the skills that he had acquired had been replaced by photo-mechanical processes of reproduction of images. He was one of three professional reproductive wood engravers who found that he could use his skills for teaching. He taught evening classes in wood engraving at the
London County Council School of Photo-engraving and Lithography in Bolt Court, where he taught, among others,
Noel Rooke,
Joan Hassall,
Mabel Alleyne and
Diana Bloomfield. The other two were
Bernard Sleigh, who taught at the
Birmingham School of Printing, and W.T. Smith, who taught at the
Slade. He was a lifelong
vegetarian, pacifist and a conscientious objector, and found it impossible to work on the blocks that
Robert Gibbings was engraving for
The History of Bovril. Ralph John Beedham married
Dora Beedham (Dora Spong) in October 1910. Dora was a British Suffragette as were her mother and sisters, and also vegetarian. They had two children, Ruth and David. He carried on engraving to the age of 83, and died in 1975, his ashes buried in the graveyard at
Brill, Buckinghamshire, where he spent the final years of his life with his daughter Ruth and her husband Robert Wickenden. ==His work in wood engraving==