This time around, he scored another eight aerial victories, between June and October 1918, culminating in the award of the Distinguished Flying Cross just days before the Armistice.
[1] His citation read: Randall remained in the RAF after the war, being granted a permanent commission with the rank of captain on 1 August 1919.
[9] He was then serving in the campaign in the Baltic in which British forces supported the White Army against the Reds in the Russian Civil War.
He flew one of the eight aircraft that created a diversion while Royal Navy Coastal Motor Boats attacked Russian warships.
[10] Meanwhile, a flotilla of eight Coastal Motor Boats entered the harbour and launched their torpedoes, succeeding in sinking the submarine tender Dvina (formerly the armoured cruiser Pamiat Azova), and damaging the battleships Petropavlovsk and Andrei Pervozvanny, though three CMB's were sunk.
[11] On 26 March 1920, Randall was awarded the Cross of Liberty Second Class by the government of Estonia,[12] in recognition of his services during the Estonian War of Independence.