Beatham was posted to the
8th Battalion with the rank of
private. He embarked on HMAT
Hororata from Melbourne on 17 April 1915 for Suez but returned to Australia in August 1915 due to venereal disease. After recuperating he embarked for Gallipoli as a reinforcement for 8th Battalion. He saw nearly a month of active service at
Gallipoli before the general evacuation to Alexandria. On 9 August 1918 at
Rosières, east of
Amiens, on the second day of the
Battle of Amiens, Beatham's battalion was attacking high ground when it was held up by heavy machine gun fire after supporting armour was knocked out of action. Beatham, accompanied by Lance Corporal W. G. Nottingham, made four charges to knock out a series of German machine gun posts holding back the advance of the Australians. Wounded in the leg during the first charge, he was killed taking out a final machine gun post on 11 August. For his gallantry he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross (VC). Gazetted on 14 December 1918, the citation for his VC read as follows: Beatham is buried at Heath Cemetery, in
Harbonnières. Six of his brothers saw active service in the First World War; three died and another spent two years as a
prisoner of war. Robert's younger brother Walter also enlisted in the AIF and served with
21st Battalion and survived the war. == Honours and awards ==